Showing posts with label National Service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Service. Show all posts

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

'Bittersweet Flight' is here!



Cover design by BerniStevensdesign.com
At long last, Bittersweet Flight is here! This is my long-promised follow-up novel to A Suitable Young Man. I’d originally hoped to be able to produce it by December of last year, making it exactly a year after the release of my first novel. Unfortunately, because of various health problems, this deadline became impossible to meet. After much fine tuning and editing, it is available for pre-order from Amazon UK (and I assume from other Amazon stores) from Tuesday, 1st March.

So what’s this one about then? It’s a touching tale of self-discovery, family, loss and love set in a Lancashire mill town in the 1950s.

It’s 1956 and Sally Simcox is a girl in trouble, at a time when having an illegitimate child is considered shameful. The father, Nick Roberts, had offered to marry her but, knowing he was in love with someone else, she’d told him she’d had a miscarriage.

Sally has fled to the anonymity of Blackpool, not knowing what she’s going to do there or how she will cope with her situation. On the day of her arrival in Blackpool, she meets a young RAF serviceman. He seems familiar and it isn’t long before Sally realises that he’s the last person she needs to meet for he is Nick’s younger brother, Phil. And he has no idea who she is. Yet it seems that their paths are destined to cross.

To tempt your reading appetite, an excerpt from Chapter 1 follows.

Chapter 1

Today should have been her wedding day.
A sense of desolation swept over Sally Simcox, causing her to falter as she stepped off the train on to the platform of Blackpool Central station. She stood for a moment, gathering courage, aware that her solitude marked her out from her fellow passengers, who were either in family groups or gangs of lads and lasses. Conscious that several of the lads were eyeing her up, she automatically straightened her spine, hoping someone would offer to give her a hand. When no-one did, she shrugged her shoulders and leaned to the side to compensate for the weight of her suitcase.
She staggered onto the main concourse of the station, amid all the hustle of a normal Saturday, mostly day trippers at this time of year, come for the famous Illuminations. Fighting clear of the crowds, she made her way to the exit and on to the street beyond where she stopped to take in this first sight of her beloved Blackpool. She put her case on the ground the better to absorb the sights, the sounds, the smells.
The Tower soared up, gigantic at such close quarters. To her left was the grey choppy expanse of the sea. Its sharp saltiness, the sweetness of candyfloss from a nearby rock stall filled her nostrils as she breathed in. For the first time in several days, she felt the stirring of anticipation and excitement. She was in Blackpool and at the beginning of a new life without her family. Being here was either a gamble or, as her brother, Jud, had said, ‘a bloody stupid idea.’ Gently, she put both hands on her belly in a protective gesture. ‘This is it, kid. It’s you and me against the world’.
From behind, someone barged into her and she landed with a thump on the pavement, where she lay winded. She glanced up in time to see a group of blue-uniformed RAF boys, laughing and jostling each other, eager to be at the delights of the busy seaside town. ‘You clumsy clots!’ she yelled after them, uselessly as it turned out for they were oblivious to anyone but themselves.
Then she felt a hand under her elbow and a voice said in her right ear. ‘Are you all right? Do you think you might have broken owt?’ The familiar Lancashire accent was reassuring.
‘No, I don’t think so,’ she said as, with help from her rescuer, she rose to her feet. Her suitcase had burst open and to her horror, her far-from-white underwear lay exposed to the world. ‘Oh, no!’ she said, inwardly cursing her mother’s laziness at not separating the whites from everything else when doing the washing, no matter how many times Sally reminded her. She gathered her belongings up, shoved them out of sight and snapped the case shut again.
‘You look a bit pale,’ the young man said. ‘Are you OK?’
She looked at him for the first time and saw that he, too, was an RAF serviceman, of medium height, good-looking in a quiet, restrained sort of way. Under his cap, his eyes were a grey-blue colour and he was fair-skinned. Troublingly, something about him was vaguely familiar. Aware that she was staring, she said, ‘I do feel a bit wobbly.’
‘Do you fancy a cup of tea? There’s a café not far from here. It’s a bit basic, but at least it’s clean.’
She shouldn’t; she didn’t know him. On the other hand, she did feel shaky and there was the baby to think of. ‘Thanks. But what about your mates?’ She nodded in the direction the other RAF servicemen had gone.
He laughed. ‘They’re not my mates. They were probably erks – National Servicemen – on their first pass after being on an armament course at Kirkham.’ He picked up her suitcase with ease and indicated that they should turn right. ‘I’m based at Kirkham too, only I’m a regular.’ The lift of his muscular shoulders showed his obvious pride.
He led the way down Central Drive until they came to a brightly lit café. From a juke box came the sounds of Elvis Presley’s ‘Don’t Be Cruel.’ Leaving her sitting at one of the formica-topped tables, the young serviceman went up to the counter where he chatted to the proprietor. He’d taken his cap off as they’d arrived, revealing fair hair ridged where the cap had rested. His manner seemed affable and easy-going, though he would never stand out from the crowd in the way Nick had done. A sharp pang of pain shot through her as she thought of Nick, lost to her now. Occasionally, she doubted the wisdom of passing up the chance of marrying him but the decision had been hers alone and she must live with the consequences. And she could never go back because she’d told her family – and Nick – that she’d had a miscarriage.
‘Are you feeling dizzy? Faint?’
She looked up, saw the concern in his eyes and pulled her thoughts to the present. ‘No, I’m OK thanks.’
He indicated the two thick white cups he’d placed on the table. ‘Sorry about the mugs but it’s a good cup of tea.’
‘I’m more used to these than china cups and saucers.’
He raised his own mug to touch hers. ‘I’m Phil, by the way, Phil Roberts.’
As he said that, the vague familiarity that had been troubling her since he’d first helped her to her feet, clarified in her mind and a sick feeling spread to her stomach. Improbable though it might seem, this personable young man was Nick’s younger brother.

The link to pre-order is here http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B01CBTQH54.

Tuesday, 13 January 2015

Self-promotion for indie authors - some thoughts.

http://www.the-tg.com/homepage.aspx

www.lostcousins.com
                                        



Successfully publishing on Amazon Kindle and Createspace isn’t the end of the story, simply the beginning. To actually sell books, whether ebooks or paperbacks, it’s essential to bring it to the notice of the public. It’s not easy, especially if you aren’t the pushy sort – and I’m not. I’m what’s known in Lancashire as 'a bit back'ards in coming for'ards.' OK, I’ve been on Facebook for a couple of years and have built up my contacts there. More recently, I’ve joined Linked In and Twitter though it’s still early days and I’ve probably to still take full advantage of those networks.

I’m a member of the national women’s organisation, Townswomen's Guilds with individual guilds all over the United Kingdom and some 34,000 members so one of the things I will be doing, once I’ve got my author copies is to send a review copy to the Townswomen, the organisation’s quarterly journal, in the hope that they will do a review. I’ve put my name forward as a prospective speaker for the Chesterfield area and already have one booking, to speak at my own Bolsover Guild at our March AGM. As the programmes are due to change in April, I’m hoping I’ll get some more speaking dates for the coming year from other Guilds in the area and where hopefully I can sell a few print copies.

With writing family and social history articles, once I had published on Kindle, I contacted the proprietor of a particular website,  Lost Cousins with whom I’ve had correspondence in the past, about my book. LostCousins is about bringing people together, not just people who share an interest in family history, but people with a shared interest in the same families, people who share the same DNA. This is done by entering census data of one’s ancestors and the Lost Cousins’ unique search system identifies members who share the same ancestors by comparing the information each member has entered on their My Ancestors page. Peter Calver has been running Lost Cousins for over ten years now and, in addition to the ancestor search facility, he sends out frequent newsletters to members. These are always incredibly helpful to family historians, with lots of tips and ideas and not just about family history. The newsletters have a chatty friendly approach and what’s more, are free to all members, whether they have paid a subscription or not. Standard Membership is free but subscription does entitle one to contact lost cousins and is well worth the reasonable cost, currently £10 a year. I have made several connections this way.

To my delight, he featured my book in one of his newlsetters and, as he has around 97,000 members, I saw an instant increase in sales. In his latest newsletter, he has posted a fantastic review of my book. This is what he had to say. 

‘Review: A Suitable Young Man
It's not often that I review a work of fiction that isn't about genealogy, but I enjoyed A Suitable Young Man so much that I just had to tell you about it. The author of this extremely enjoyable book is Anne L Harvey - who many of you will know from her articles in family history magazines - and the story takes place in 1956, against the background of National Service and the Suez Crisis.
 I'm not familiar with the area of Lancashire where it's set … but I'm glad to say that this didn't spoil my enjoyment in the slightest - the people and locations seemed so real that I thought at first that it must be semi-autobiographical. Judging from the effusive email I received from a LostCousins member both the period detail and the geography are spot on - this is what Val wrote:

"I am only half way through but can tell now that it will be the best book I have ever read. I can see Rivington Pike from my kitchen window and my daily walks take me 'up Rivington' or to Horwich.

"In reading the book I am reliving my youth, everywhere the characters go I also went, and the last train on a Saturday night out of Blackpool was spot on. It used to be an exciting/frightening ride home where the lads did take the light bulbs out and throw them out of the windows. Fortunately I was with my own Teddy Boy boyfriend so felt safe enough. Like Kathy my parents did not like my Teddy Boy but we rode out all the rough seas and later married.”

I didn't want the book to end either - so I was absolutely delighted to discover that Anne has another novel in the pipeline. A Suitable Young Man is a skilful recreation of Britain in the mid-1950s which reminded me what it was like to be young - and whilst some people might pigeonhole the novel as romantic fiction, so was Pride & Prejudice. Mind you, there is one big difference between Jane Austen and Anne L Harvey - Jane Austen wasn't a LostCousins member!’

This immediately prompted another rush of sales, even in the United States, a few in Canada, one in France and one in Italy, presumably ex-pats living there. So, as an exercise in self-promotion, extremely valuable. My advice is to explore as many of your contacts as possible. And think laterally!