Onwards to the Question – remember to sign up for the wee blog if you haven’t already to find out. And also, don’t forget to sign up for the Wee Mailing List to find out what the Eighth question will be.
Tendu is not the first of your books to have an Autistic character at the forefront – the main character of Sisters at the Edge of the World, was certainly heavily on the spectrum. Though because of her time period she would never have been diagnosed as such. However, Amalphia is the first of your characters to be outright stated in the narrative as Autistic, and it effects many aspects of her life within the pages of Tendu.
From friendships, to relationships, to her placement in her original dancing college; all the way up to her involvement in the mysterious and, slightly sketchy, research of the unsettling Michelle. Obviously, her Autism is not a minor element of her character. Or the story itself.
So, tell me what was the inspiration for this particular character choice? Was this the plan from the start, her Autism diagnosis, or did it come about naturally through writing the character?
It was while writing these books that I found out that I,myself, am on the autistic spectrum. Though Amalphia is a very different person to me, I realised that she was neurodivergent too, and the discovery added a richness to the writing of her character and adventures. I suppose it made it all more intensely personal.
But do remember that she’s not me, with all that’s to come; she has way more energy!
And now I give you my pretentious question – remember to sign up for the wee blog if you haven’t already to find out. And also, don’t forget to sign up for the Wee Mailing List to find out what the Eighth question will be.
Amalphia’s story takes place in the beautiful and cutthroat world of professional ballet – what inspired the decision to set her story in that particular backdrop?
When I was first considering writing a contemporary romance, I was unsure exactly where to place it. Inspiration struck while I was lying in the bath contemplating the issue. I saw a line of dancers in my mind. They were at the barre performing ronde de jambe, a circular leg exercise, and I knew the ballet world would be the setting for the story. My own dance training and career provided many of the details,and everything grew from there.
What Ho wee readers and welcome to the first of my blog series to feature the collaboration of Ailish Sinclair. If you’re familiar with the formula already you should know this week I’ll be releasing a blog post a day – each one taking the form, as the title might suggest, of a question . An overly pretentious question. Which hopefully Ailish will oblige me by answering – remember to sign up for the wee blog if you haven’t already to find out. And also, don’t forget to sign up for the Wee Mailing List to find out what the Eighth question might be.
Well, there was no need for years of research, especially as I have a dance background and the castle was fully formed in my mind from the previous books. It was actually a fun change to write the modern world. The characters have phones and watch TV. They go to Chinese restaurants and walk through present-day London. The castle has a swimming pool and a theatre and dance studios.
Though, essentially, at their core, relationships and love are the same throughout time. Misunderstandings happen. People behave badly or well. They fall in love. They try to make it work. They worry that it won’t. These things remain. They are timeless. And I love writing them.
Wow! I mean I did already know she had a dance background, but that was a really good reply.
At the end of my original post – read here if you’re interested – I realised that Ailish Sinclair had stepped into the witch’s stone, using it to travel through time to research her historical romances. I concluded that this was cheating and then ran away screaming for all my life was worth – I didn’t reveal that last part but that’s what happened. Of course, you can’t publish books if you’re traveling through the eras they’re set in, at least not by your real name – so of course Ailish did not stay away long. She has denied that she is a mermaid, and that she has a pet bear in her own blog here. But notice that she does not deny the time travel accusation. This filled me with new hope, so determined to prove that I was neither crazy nor stalking her, I decided to conduct an interview with the time traveling author. Below are the four questions she agreed to answer on the subject.
4. Now that you have returned from your adventures in time, what have you most enjoyed about being back in the 21stcentury?
Writing historical fiction certainly is rather like adventuring through time, you’re right. I love the periods my characters inhabit, but chocolate cake and flushing toilets are great bonuses of the modern world.
3.When did you first realize that you could travel through time using the Witch Stone?
Emm… I do contemplate my writing as I walk in the woods and sit by the stone. I’ve been doing that for over ten years.
2. What Era have you most enjoyed travelling through?
It’s quite hard to pick one. I loved the medieval world and the 18th century, but 1st century Scotland is my current favorite, maybe just because it’s the most recent time that I’ve written, or as you say, travelled through. There’s a natural wildness to it that I love. I may have to go back there again… in writing, you understand.
1.Now that you’re back, what can we expect next from Ailish Sinclair.
My feet are firmly back in the current day now as I edit a series of three very naughty and dark contemporary romance novels. There’s no research needed to know what people might be eating or wearing, but there are other *blushes* tricky and intricate scenes to work through.
That’s is all very well, but I know what I saw…
Ailish Sinclair refused to answer anymore of my questions on the grounds that they were becoming “ridiculous” and or “insane”.
Well…I promised you all some nice vegan pictures, so I better go ahead and deliver on that promise, else they better start calling me The Wee Lying Lassie.
Vegan Chilli with Bake PotatoesVegan Roast Dinner. Including: Roast Potatoes, Sprouts, nut roast and home made red current jelly.Brunch.Chocolate Birthday CakeVegetables in smokey tomato saucePloughman’s lunchBeans and ToastTomato and Sweet Potato PastaVegan McDonaldsFancy SaladThree Curry FeastCarrot and Coriander SoupChips and Battered MushroomsVegan Chinease FoodIf you’ve enjoyed these delicious pictures – don’t forget to check out the original post here. And why not follow the Wee blog if you haven’t already. And check me out on my Instagram- where most of these photos come from – , Twitter, Pinterest, Tumblr, TikTok and GoodReads. Until next time Wee Subscribers, stay safe, stay sane and have a very Bonny day.
This was a very good book, I want to make that clear before I say anything else. The characters were both fascinating and endearing – or at least the ones we were meant to like. The plot was well thought out, and it contained a fascinating mystery and a good fun whodunit. However, the ending felt cheap…and unsatisfactory.
Okay maybe I should explain, be warned here there be spoilers from now on. First the book’s blurb: I am your maid I know about your secrets. Your dirty laundry. But what do you know about me?
Molly the maid is all alone in the world. A nobody. She’s used to being invisible in her job at the Regency Grand Hotel, plumping pillows and wiping away the grime, dust and secrets of the guests passing through. She’s just a maid – why should anyone take notice? But Molly is thrown into the spotlight when she discovers an infamous guest, Mr. Black, very dead in his bed. This isn’t a mess that can be easily cleaned up. And as Molly becomes embroiled in the hunt for the truth, following the clues whispering in the hallways of the Regency Grand, she discovers a power she never knew was there. She’s just a maid – but what can she see that others overlook.
Spoiler Alert: She’s going to get accused of killing this guest. I would feel slightly bad about ruining this for me, but honestly this is when the book really got good for me. Suddenly everyone being a bitch to the main character wasn’t just unpleasant, but a direct threat to her well being. It’s also notable that this is the part of the story where she wises up and actually connects with people that care about her, and aren’t just looking to loose her.
Now it’s not just an interest to the reader to find out who killed Mister Black, it’s vital to Molly as well. And they do. Sort of. Certainly someone is arrested for the crime. But it’s made clear by the end of the book that it’s not the person that actually killed him. There, I’ve ruined the twist for you. I won’t tell you which party did which, I’m not that much of a jackass. But I will say this – the reveal of who actually did it is actually really disappointing. And like, just a bad writing – I mean, they’re mentioned maybe once, or twice in the whole novel before the reveal. I’m just saying, the whole thing would have been just so much more satisfying for Molly to have been the killer. As is, it’s a good book and one I would recommend – it’s just not the greatness it could have been.
Okay rant over, now onto the ratings.
My Mum’s Scores
Story: 2
Narration:3
Production:3
Overall enjoyment: 3
Final Score: 11
Additional Notes: the maid did it!
My Brother’s Scores
Story: 4.5
Narration: 5
Production: 5
Overall enjoyment: 4.4
Final Score: 18.9
Additional Notes: The ending felt forced. That being said, it was a good story, until that darn epilogue. I liked the Molly-Jaan Manual Romance.
My scores
Story: 3
Narration: 5
Production: 4
Overall enjoyment: 4
Final Score: 16
Additional Notes: Man, talk about a good book let down by a bad ending. I’m glad we read it, but I don’t think it’s something I’d go back to.Book’s Final Score: 45.9If you’ve enjoyed this wee Rant of Mine, why not hop on over to the original post and check out the first ten audiobooks that made our list. Also check out my Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Facebook, Tumblr, and Goodreads and Kofiwhile you’re at it. Until next time Wee Subscribers, stay safe, stay sane, and have a very bonny day.
Reason I chose them: The film E.T. Made me cry, and I thought it was cool that they seemed to exist in both our universe and a galaxy far, far away.
4. Darleks
Franchise: Doctor Who Planet of origin: Skaro Most well-known Member: Davros Reason I chose them: I mean they are the best villains on Doctor who. Do I really need a better reason than that?
3. Ultronians
Planet of origin: Ultron Most well-known Member: George Sunday (later Monday) Reason I chose them: Look at them, they come from a show that’s whole premise was basically : LOL, what I’d Dougal from Father Ted was a superhero. They are spectacular.
2. Chiss
Franchise: Star Wars Planet of origin: Csilla Most well-known Member: Thrawn Reason I chose them: After I decided I would only choose one – solely – Star Wars species I debated for quite a while which one I should place here. After all this franchise have no end to interesting cretures and people to dig into. Ewoks, Wookies, Gungans, to only list a few. But I didn’t want to be too obvious with my choice – as I will be with the next species on this list. So then I started thinking about the individual meme era of these species, which one was the most likeable. And the most surprising in that likability, someone so likeable you end up liking him even though he’s a blue space nazi. And then it hit me, oh yeah, Thrawn!
1. Vulcans
Franchise: Star Trek Planet of origin: Vulcan Most well-known Member: Spock Reason I chose them: Honestly, check out my last blog post – and that will give you more insight than I can offer right now.
If you’ve enjoyed this short little list of mine why not go back and check out the post that inspired it. Also while you’re at it give my Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Facebook, Goodreads, Tumblr and Kofi a look at too. Until next time we subscribers, stay sane, stay safe, and have a very Bonny day.
What Ho, Wee Readers and welcome back to my Wee Writing Blog. In the past I have covered many a topic raging from the shockingly nerdy to the deeply melodramatic. But today I’d like to speak to you about a loaf of bread.
Ah yes bread, whether we speak of the plain sliced loaf of the local supermarket or the freshly baked seedy roll, we as a society can’t get seem to get enough of dear bread. Why, even people that can’t handle gluten love bread – why else would there be so many packets of gluten-free bread loaves in my mum’s cupboards.
Well, my bread lovers what if I were to tell you that I have discovered the definitive best bread in Scotland. I’d even go so far as to say the world, but I think that would spark too many arguments in the comments.
And where exactly is this wonderful baked good to be found you might just be asking yourself right about now. A little place called Findhorn. A truly magical, and deeply spiritual place truly worth a visit even if it weren’t for the bread. If I was a more detailed oriented blogger I might then tell you a bit about the Findhorn foundation – founded in 1962 by Peter and Eileen Candy, and Dorothy Maclean – but as I am quite a lazy person I will instead just direct you to their site and post some pictures down below.
Besides which they don’t make the bread in the Findhorn Foundation anymore, but rather in the nearby Bakery in the village of Findhorn. Or is it a town, if anyone knows please let me know down in the comments.
Anyway, let’s move on to what we’re really all here to see…sometimes slightly blurry pictures of very delicious bread.
If you’ve enjoyed this little salivation over a simple loaf of bread why not follow the wee blog if you haven’t already. Also check me out on Twitter, Instagram, Mastodon, Threads, Pinterest, Tumblr, TikTok, Goodreads, Facebook and Kofi. Also sign up for the Wee Mailing List by the 31st of August to get a brief glimpse of my next blog series. Until next time wee readers, stay safe and have a very bonny day.
What Ho Wee Readers, well it’s been a while since I put up a post that wasn’t of the Wee Archive, hasn’t it? I could make excuses, excessive tiredness and a hectic work schedule , but I think that would just annoy us both. So instead, I’ll just ask you to turn your mind away from thoughts of the past posting schedules, and move on to the future. Dare I say it, a post apocalyptic future?
Okay that was a bit corny, but I didn’t know how to more elegantly segue us into talking about Station Elven, one of my top current favourite books. Speaking of…
First published on the 9th September 2014, Mandel’s Station Eleven follows two time periods. One set in the present day, following the life of actor Arthur Leander, a man who dies of a heart attack during the first few pages of the book, and all those that interwove in and out of it during his relatively short time on Earth. Such as his first wife, the creator of a post-apocalyptic comic series named ‘Station Eleven’, his former best friend a corporate psychologist who’s drifted away from him, his second wife and young son who live in a different country, and Kirsten, the young child actress who was there on the stage when he drew his last breath.
The second, tells the story of the travelling symphony- an acting troop making their way through the post-apocalyptic world which the ‘Georgia flue’ has left behind. Kirsten , now an adult, is one of the leading actors in the Travelling Symphony. We follow this ragtag band of misfits as they travel to a previously friendly town, only to discover it has been taken over by a doomsday cult. Where Kirsten will meet the mysterious cult’s Prophet and discover he may have a connection to her past that even she cannot fully comprehend.
That is the basic gist of both interweaving plots, not altogether very well described but there you go. The book flicks back and forth between Arthur Leander’s modern timeline, and Kirsten‘s future to give a grander scope of both the lives of the characters, and how terribly they were disturbed and thrown of course by the tragedy of the Georgian Flue pandemic. An illness that wiped out a sizeable portion of the world’s population very quickly. Huh, why does that sound familiar, when was this written again? 2011? Are all the best writers going turn out to be witches?
Well, regardless it’s little more than a framing device to get us to the post-apocalyptic world, and by extension our main theme of the book. That is the connecting nature of art, of loving art, of doing art, of appreciating art. How when we create a piece of art, and it doesn’t matter what kind – whether it be a painting, a novel, a show, a freaking comic book – we in a sense, are reaching across time to all the generations that have the potential to see and (hopefully) love the work we are creating. And it goes the other way too, when we as modern readers sit down to read something like Shakespeare we connect with an artist, with their voice, their life, that lived hundreds of years before even our grandparents were born.
And I personally never fail to find that astounding.
The book uses its post apocalyptic setting to highlight the connecting nature of the art the characters experience ,with refreshingly frank clarity. Works from the plays of Shakespeare, to episodes of Star Trek, and the impact they have on the characters are openly discussed. The actors of the symphony have deep conversations on whether the works of Shakespeare they often perform still connect to their audiences’ post-civilisation lives, or if they just provide an escape from the day-to-day drudgery that is life now.
However the most illustrating example of this cross generational connection comes from the thing that the book takes its very title from. Namely the in-universe comic book series “Station Eleven”. Set in its own post-apocalyptic world, the comic book tells the story of Doctor Eleven and his giant, flooded, forever in twilight, planet-shaped space station known to all as “Station Eleven”. I could go on to give a detailed summary of the plot of the comic book, telling you all about Doctor Eleven and his fight against the people of the ‘Undersea’, but honestly that matters significantly less both to the book and my point, than then connection it bridges between three people. Who through the courses of their lives build a connection to one another through these pieces of art.
First we have the creator of the work Miranda, the first wife of Arthur Leander, who interestingly enough in a work of fiction, creates the graphic novels of Station Eleven with little to no intention of ever publishing them. Her satisfaction comes from the creation of the work itself and its not until years later, near to the time when civilisation is about to end, when she finally publishes the first three copies at her own expense. It’s an interesting, and highly unique stance for her character to take, but its one I can’t really relate to at this point in my life. So in that vain please take a look at my Short Stories page, where you should find my publish stories. Or at least most of them anyway. I’d also like to point you in the direction of my Fanfiction.net and Ao3 accounts, where you’ll find my fan-fiction work. Because it doesn’t matter if I can’t publish it professionally, and possibly make some money off it, I’m highly proud of what I’ve written and would like as many people to go and look at them as possible. Go ahead,go click on them, we can all wait for the post to continue…
Okay so maybe I don’t have the patience for that.
In the end, possibly because of this, only two other people will read these comics – Kirsten and the Prophet. I don’t want to give away anymore spoilers so I won’t tell you how the Prophet came into possession of these pieces of art, but suffice to say the comics have had a profound affect on these two children and the adults they would become. With Kristen not only were they a connection to a world she could hardly remember anymore, but they were a beautiful distraction to her terrible childhood on the road. For the Prophet they seemed to have become almost a religion, their words mixing with his own odd form of Christianity. Becoming so much a part of his philosophy that when he hears someone else quote them – line for line – for possibly the first time ever, he literally stops dead in his tracks.
These words, written by a corporate executive who died on a beach almost twenty or so years before, connect these two people who could not be anymore different, in such a profound way its as if they speak a language that only they understand. Really, because its such a small sample size, its as we’re seeing an intensified version of the connection made between Shakespeare and Gene Roddenberry by the other players of the traveling symphony.
As artists, when we write words down on a page, or set paint to canvas, or whatever form our art takes, what we do is seek to build a connection with our audience, with our readers, with our patrons and viewers. We might certainly expect this connection between ourselves and the audience in our own time, but what if that spark, that connection goes beyond that? Not only beyond our own time, the years of our life, but beyond the very world, the very civilisation that we live in. Why I think that would be something very close to magic.
This is the feeling, this is the theme, this is the connection that Emily St. John Mandel’s Station Eleven provoked in me. What about you?
If you’ve enjoyed my little philosophical rant why not follow the wee blog if you haven’t already. And make sure to check me out on Twitter, Instagram, Mastodon, Threads (which I’m now on people), Pinterest, Tumblr, TikTok, Goodreads, Facebook and Kofi. Also sign up for the Wee Mailing List before the 6th of August to find out what I’ve been messing around with on Canva for the past month and a bit. Until next time wee readers, keep safe and have a very bonny day.
Well this has certainly been a fun month of Wee Archive’s, if you’re interested in seeing more of these posts before anyone else, why not sign up to The Wee Mailing List before the 9th of July. until then sit back and enjoy this slightly silly list.
Top 5 Sexiest Men from Jane the Virgin
5. Rafael Solano
Role in Story: Main Love interest Personality: Jerk with a heart of Jerk (which is why he’s at the bottom of the list) Sexy level: 100 %
4. Fabian Regalo del Celo
Role in Story: Temporary Love interest Personality: A bit of a jerk when hurt Sexy Level: 90%
3. Dennis Chambers
Role in Story: Michael’s Partner on the Force Personality: Sweet and loyal Sexy Level: 120%
2. Michael Cordero Jr.
Role in Love Story: Secondary Love interest Personality: Giant Dork and best person in the world Sexy level: 300%
1.Rogelio de la Vega
Role in Story: Long Lost Father of the Main Character Personality: Fabulous Sexy Level: Infinite
If you’ve enjoyed this very short list of mine why not check out the wee blog. Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Facebook, Tumblr and Goodreads for all that good stuff. Until next time, be safe, and have a very bonny day.