The Book Whisperer

jottings, musings and recommendations of an incurable bookaholic

Author Interview – Becca Fitzpatrick December 27, 2009

Filed under: Becca Fitzpatrick,Paranormal,Young Adult — The Book Whisperer @ 11:43 pm

Thank you to Becca Fitzpatrick, author of Hush Hush, for taking the time to answer some questions about her favourite books and also her own series of books.

Becca  grew up reading Nancy Drew and Trixie Belden with a flashlight under the covers. She graduated college with a degree in health, which she promptly abandoned for storytelling. When not writing, she’s most likely prowling sale racks for reject shoes, running, or watching crime dramas on TV. (Info courtesy of Becca’s Goodreads profile). Hush Hush is Becca’s first book and was published by Simon & Schuster Children’s Books  in 2009.

 Have you made any new years resolutions for 2010? If so, are there any that you can share with us?

 Laughing! I haven’t made any yet – I’m not that organized! Right now my goal is to finish Crescendo edits on time, and then I’ll start making new goals. Hopefully there’s nothing wrong with making resolutions all year long, because that’s usually how I operate!

Have you ever read a book and thought “damn it! I wish I’d written that!”? If so, which one and why? 

Yes, I’ve thought that! When I read Outlander by Diana Gabaldon, I couldn’t help but wish a) I could write like that, and b) have her whole story in my head.

You’re about to be stranded on a desert island for a year and you’re only allowed to take 3 books with you. What do you take?

Oh man, tough question! 1. How about Jane Austen: the Complete Novels (one book, several stories. I’m trying to economize here.) 2. Outlander by Diana Gabaldon 3. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Now on to the fabulous Hush Hush: Where did you get the idea from? Did the plot and characters sneak up on you or hit you like a sledgehammer?

The very first inspiration for Hush, Hush came from something that happened to me in my own tenth-grade bio class. My teacher asked me, in front of the whole class, to name characteristics I’d like in a mate. I was so embarrassed! Years later, when my husband enrolled me in a writing class for my birthday, my teacher asked me to write a scene “showing, not telling, humiliation.” I immediately started crafting a scene based on my experience in biology. That short writing assignment evolved into one of the early scenes in Hush, Hush.

The setting for Hush Hush is fantastically dark and eerie. Is it based on anywhere you know?

No…unless you count my imagination! When I started writing Hush, Hush, I knew right away that atmosphere was going to play a big role in the book. I wanted a small, seemingly harmless New England town that was moody and creepy enough that up-to-no-good fallen angels could be at home there. I’m very happy with the way the book’s atmosphere seems to rise right out of the pages. Obviously there are things I wish I could go back and change about the book, but the atmosphere is one of the things I feel I nailed. It’s just the way I imagined it.

I absolutely adored Vee (Nora’s best friend). Do you know a Vee in real life?

I used to! Vee’s character was inspired by two of my childhood best friends. They were both wacky, crazy, wild girls. They said and did what was on their mind without reservation. In a lot of ways, I envied them the same way Nora envies Vee.

The sequel to Hush Hush, Crescendo, is coming up later in 2010. Can you give us any sneak previews of Crescendo?

In Crescendo, readers will find out what really happened the night Nora’s dad was murdered. Let’s just say he was living a secret life…one with ties to Patch…
Several minor characters also return with bigger roles, including Marcie Millar, Detective Basso, and Rixon. The most prominent new character is a guy named Scott Parnell, whom Nora knew years ago as Scotty the Potty.

Will Crescendo be the last book in the series or are there more planned?

I’m only contracted for Crescendo, but I really hope I get to write a third book. I have a storyline for Book 3, so I’m definitely not ready to be done with the series just yet.

Do you have any plans for other series after this one? If so can you tease us with any juicy tidbits?

I do have another story idea! In fact, I started working on it right after Hush, Hush went on submission to editors. I have a plot, and a couple of pretty cool characters. The story has a paranormal element, but not in the way people might expect. It’s a sexy, flirty novel, and it’s lighter than Hush, Hush.

 
Finally, the quick fire round:
Cats or dogs: Dogs
Summer or winter: Summer
Bath or shower: Shower
Beach or mountains: Beach
Coffee or tea: Neither! I’m a water girl. It’s the best drink in the world, and it’s great for your skin!

Trailer for Hush Hush

 

 

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Book Reviews: James Herriot December 27, 2009

Filed under: Comfort Reading,James Herriot,Laugh Out Loud — The Book Whisperer @ 11:18 pm

It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet

If Only They Could Talk is the first book in this series of eight (I have the box set).

 What a wonderful trip down memory lane this book was. I remember watching the TV series back in the 70′s and 80′s and picking this book up for the first time was like settling down by the fire with old friends.
Set in the Yorkshire Dales, this is the first book in a series by rookie vet James Herriot and his new life in the countryside and among the animals and his struggle to win over the old Yorkshire farmers and eccentric characters he meets there. There were so many times when I literally laughed out loud (once in a quiet hospital corridor while waiting for someone to come out of the theatre – which got me a few horrified looks!). The character of Mrs Pumphrey and her dog Tricki Woo had me bent over crying with laughter!
I just loved this book. I live in Yorkshire, about an hour from the Dales, and it has made me want to jump in my car and head off to Herriot country; the whole place just came alive with his passion for the region. I am really looking forward to reading the rest in the series – this is the sort of comfort reading that I know I can look forward to if I need a break from real life. In the words of James Herriot while describing his beloved countryside – I felt like I could breathe. This book is a real tonic – highly recommended.

 

It Shouldn't Happen to a Vet

It Shoudln’t Happen to a Vet  is the second book in the series.

Oh how I love this series! This is pure comfort reading at its very best. I can’t remember the last time I laughed so hard reading a book. Picking up the books in this series is like catching up with a friend for a glass of red wine by the fire.
The characters are all so brilliantly drawn that I feel I know them all. To get to know about these burly Yorkshire farmers (with all their local dialect thrown in to boot) is a joy and a priviledge.

 

 

 

Book Review: Walking in Pimlico by Ann Featherstone December 27, 2009

Filed under: Ann Featherstone,Crime/Mystery/Thriller,The Victorians — The Book Whisperer @ 11:10 pm

 Walking in Pimlico  - A comic clog dancer witnesses a brutal killing in a dark and dingy London backstreet in Victorian Britain as his show closes for the night. When he finds out that he is not the only one who witnessed the murder, they soon realise that the killer knows who they are and here begins an escape to pastures (well, stage shows) new with the killer always one step behind. Even though this is a murder mystery book, there isn’t actually much mystery to it at all as we find out who the killer is within the first 50 pages and they go on to narrate parts of the book themselves. That said, it does have it’s share of intrigue and it’s a whole load of fun to follow them the lenghth and bredth od the the country as they get more and more paranoid, constantly looking over their shoulders.

Dark, dingy, funny, recommended.

 

Book Review: Girl, Missing by Sophie McKenzie December 27, 2009

Filed under: Sophie McKenzie,Young Adult — The Book Whisperer @ 11:05 pm

Girl, Missing gets into full swing immediately, no messing around with backgrounds or character development – the first page tells us all we need to know. Lauren Matthews is fourteen and knows she is adopted but becomes suddenly curious when she has to write a school essay called “Who am I?” and her parents become cagey and withold imformation. Lauren decides to try and find out where she came from herself with the help of the internet, a missing childrens website and her best friend, Jam. Lauren and Jam end up on an adventure that takes them to America where they find themselves on the run.

Although it was clearly aimed at the younger end of the YA spectrum, it still had it share of excitement and was a very pacey book with plenty of cliffhangers at the end of chapters.

 

 
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