About
a year and 8 months ago, I met a lovely woman by the name of Jemima
Pett, who lives in the U. K. We became acquaintances during the “A
to Z Challenge” of 2014 when we were on the same “Theme Reveal”
Team and were busily scratching our heads and working with Damyanti
G., Guilie, Samantha Geary-Jones, Vidya Sury, Anna Tan, Csenka,
(plus myself and Jemima, to make up the “7 Fair Ladies of I Forget”
because I'm typing like a fiend, as I am behind the 8-ball*, as per
usual) to get our Theme Reveal Post going and set by March 23rd
and trying to help all the newbies and it was just. . . Arrrrrghhh.
Everyone had questions, or rambled a lot and never found a question
in all the verbiage and we were ALL pulling our hair out.
*I
was in the hospital for 2 days this week; I tried to Scooby my way
out of it, but I was orthostatic and Tampa Fire-Rescue wasn't going
to let me skate. Then, at TGH, they got all boresome and insisted I
stay the night and the next day! More later on that whole fiasco. It
was more like Thurber's “The Night The Bed Fell”.
courtesy:downwithtyranny.blogspot.com
"I suppose that the high water-mark of my youth in Columbus, Ohio was the night the bed fell on my father." ~ James Thurber
What
started as a disparate group of women became a batch of friends,
forged in the heat of fire. Not the fire of Stalingrad, by any means,
but the fire of just the usual frustrations of stupid computers,
internet connections and storms half-way around the world that would
put us out of touch with one or another for a day or so. We have
continued to stay in touch and a bond of affection has developed
between us. When Jemima was looking for some folks for her book tour,
I jumped at the chance. I wasn't too sure she liked me at first, but
realized later, it is her way. She is a dear, dear lady and I really
enjoy her writing. I know you will too!
Fred, looking imperious on his wheelbarrow, I think.
She
writes of that fey creature, the guinea pig and Jemima is a
world-builder for them. I will say no more than that, but let her
interview tell you about what she has written and accomplished, and
share her pictures with you. After reading the excerpt, the
Spotlight, the Author Interview and the Character Interview, follow
the links provided for my reviews of the books! You will not be
disappointed! My thanks to Jemima Pett for allowing me to participate
in this tour and to her Tour Guide/Assistant Tonya for running a
flawless tour!
It is not preposterous, nor "soppy" (as Jemima has said) to build a world or write stories that feature animals in a series of settings that may seem anthropomorphic or counter to whatever we, as people would otherwise have them do. Richard Adams wrote a very successful barnburner of a suspense yarn about a bunch of rabbits called "Watership Down" and more ominously, George Orwell wrote "Animal Farm" a cautionary tale with a bitter ending about the risks of Capitalism. Pett's Guinea Pigs inhabit no such worlds, but they do face problems and solve them, and then are left with bigger problems to solve later on; a not un-life-like scenario. Let us enter her world and see what we can find. The first thing we hear is a rather braggadocios someone talking to someone else. . .
CHARACTER INTERVIEW
This
is Lord Mariusz of Hattan, who thinks he's a tough guy, and in
control of everything. He likes to think of himself as a more refined
type of gangster leader, but really he's a businessman carrying on
the Wozna Cola empire built up by his grandfather. He appears from a
side tunnel in mysterious circumstances in The
Princelings
of the East, then he narrates his own story in The Traveler in Black
and White (Book 4 of the series). And then, because he's simply
irrepressible, he turns up in book 6, Bravo Victor. And he's
scheduled for brief appearances in books 7 and 8, probably, too.
Where
are you from?
I
was born and raised in Castle Hattan, on the Isle of Hattan. It's a
busy Metropolis on the edge of the Great Ocean.
What
do you want from life?
When
I was young I wanted success, power and wealth. Now I'm successful,
powerful and wealthy, and I wish people would just stop messing with
that. It pains me to have to move some of them out of the way.
Could
you describe yourself to me?
I'm
tall, dark and built like a powerhouse – which of course I am. I
have black hair with a distinguished white bit that sticks up in
front. I call it a crest, I don't know what you'd call it.
If
you were granted three wishes, what would you ask for?
The
first would be to get the other two gangs to give up trying to mess
with my patch, and just knuckle down under my plans for them. I have
to waste security on my best guys when they want to walk the streets
of Hattan, on regular stuff like dining out, you know?
The
second would be for my science guru, Saku, to invent something to
move the stock by sea, very fast, so we could stop having pesky
franchises on the other side of the world.
My
third would be for a nice dame to come and visit me any night I
fancied without expecting diamonds and pearls as gifts before and
after. It's easy enough to ask for a bit of respect, isn't it?
In
your relationship with others, how are you different with family than
you are with friends? Why?
Family!
Load of good-for-nothings, most of them. Nephews, lounging around
instead of working their butts off like I had to. The womenfolk stay
in the lower levels, I don't know what they get up to. The kids, I
have to find work for them. They don't know how lucky they are. When
I was their age I was running errands, learning the ropes, working
day and night to keep the business ahead of the opposition. Never
time to make friends, although I reckon I count Saku as a friend.
Willow too, but he died. They are the sort of people you work with,
you know how they react, you can rely on them; they don't give you
trouble, you know? Yeah.
The
only decent nephew seems to have disappeared. Willoughby. He's got
talent, that one. He could be a contender for my successor. That's
what you have to do with family, keep an eye on them, work out who's
going to inherit, make sure he knows his job. Friends, they know the
score, you can rely on them.
How
do you fall in love? At first sight? Over a long period?
Love
is a waste of time. Playmates, fine, see someone you like, enjoy your
time together, move on and get on with business. You can't mix
business with pleasure.
Describe
your ideal mate.
Cute,
sassy and knows her place. Although I've met a couple in another
place entirely that could make excellent bosses of this castle. Hmm,
I wonder... but that would mess up the established line. Too much
trouble.
What
parts of loving come easy for you? Hard?
Easy
to charm them, have a good time; hard to deal with their demands when
you're in my position. Best keep to business arrangements – much
safer.
When
you walk into a room, what do you notice first? Second?
In
my business you don't just walk into a room and notice things. You
assess the situation before you open the door, so you know who's
there, where they are, and whether anyone is primed to spring a
surprise on you. Okay, it's not as bad as the old days, but old
habits die hard. On the other hand, when someone else walks into a
room the first thing he'd better notice is me.
What
really moves you, or touches you to the soul?
Genuine
kindness. For no other reason than wanting to help. It doesn't happen
much here, so it kinda wrong-foots me when I meet it on my travels.
Amazing that there can be places where people are kind to each other
and want nothing in return, no points scoring, no scores to be
settled.
Just
to be kind. Weird.
Thanks
for interviewing me. Have a sample of Wozna, the best cola in the
universe. Doesn't that taste good?
Mariusz
Lord
of Hattan
Victor, having a snack.
AUTHOR
BIO
I’ve
been writing since I was 8 years old. I still have a small booklet I
found in my mother’s box of treasures, written in a very childish
hand, entitled The Little Stream. It reads very much like the story
of Smetana’s Vltava, or The Moldau as it was called when I was
young, so I must have been into classical music at an early age (I
blame my brothers’ influence). My early fiction attempts failed for
want of suitable inspiration: I couldn’t get characters or plot
that seemed interesting, and my first attempts were derided by a
‘friend’. I had the bug for writing, though, and wrote articles
and event reports for newsletters and magazines whenever I got the
opportunity. My career in business and in environmental research kept
me chained to a desk for many years, but also gave me the opportunity
to write manuals, reports, science papers, blogs, journals, anything
and everything that kept the words flowing. Finally the characters
jumped into my head with stories that needed to be told…
I
now live in a village in Norfolk, UK, with my guinea pigs, the first
of whom, Fred, George, Victor and Hugo, provided the inspiration
for the Princelings stories.
AUTHOR
FOLLOW LINKS
AMAZON
AUTHOR PAGE – http://www.amazon.co.uk/Jemima-Pett/e/B006F68PVE/
WEBSITE
/ BLOG – http://princelings.co.uk blog http://jemimapett.com
FACEBOOK
– http://facebook.com/princelings
TWITTER
– http://twitter.com/jemima_pett
PINTEREST
– http://pinterest.com/jemimapett/
Hi Jemima,
Thank you for sitting down with me today for an interview. Before we start though, I have to tell you I was blown away by your website – how much information you have provided about your younger years: when you began writing; why you didn’t continue until later in life; your career; your guinea pig pets (love the photo) and what you’re doing in the writing world today!
Definitely an inspiring tale and I smiled my way through everything, so thanks!
And, since your author website contains practically everything a reader/fan might want to know about you, I’d like to just focus on your writing.
1)
You mentioned in your bio that you first began writing when you were
eight. What prompted this? Did you, or your family, read extensively
and you just woke up one day thinking that you would write a story?
Had the desire to write been there all along, but you opted to wait
until you mastered cursive/penmanship so it would look neat and
pretty? (That’s actually a ‘page’ from my childhood). Or, was
it something entirely different?
I don't remember how it fit in with the handwriting issue, but I did get a certificate for handwriting that most people in my class entered, sponsored by the chocolate makers, Cadbury. It's among my school certificates still!
2) As
a child, you wrote a book titled The Little Stream. You
compared it to the story of Smetana’s Vltava which, of course,
makes me wonder if you brought the ‘drama’ of the entire suite
into your story. The castle, the river, the spurned maiden, etc.? Or,
was it similar only to the river (Vltava) piece? Either way, was
there some form of ‘happily ever after?’
3) Do
you ever regret that you didn’t write books sooner, due in part to
the unkind words from a ‘friend?’ What advice would you give to
new, or aspiring, authors should they wind up in a similar situation?
Of course, I was completely untutored in writing. I think this is something where the craft can come later; the creativity is important. There are parallels with painting here. Who would teach a child to paint starting with the colour wheel? Or maybe some people are and that's why so many people believe they can't draw.
And my friend was right – the book I had started to write was rubbish. But that's the whole point of learning anything. Early attempts may well be rubbish. Very few people are perfect at anything they do straight away. We all have to hone our craft, skill, expertise... and learn more about the world and life too, if we are writers and want to make our stories believable.
4)
Your next phase of writing was articles and event reports for
newsletters (is that a newspaper?) and magazines. How did you get
accepted on as a writer for these publications? And what prompted
your desire to write them? Any absolute favorites that added to the
family photo album?
5)
Okay, so eventually, (to quote you) “the characters jumped into
myhead with stories that needed to be told…” Where were you in
life when this happened? What triggered the ‘release?’ Was it
some random experience? Maybe a dream – or a television program?
Your cute, furry, guinea pig pets?
6)
Alright, let’s talk about your Princelings books. I’ve
read the series ‘about’ and all the books look like they’ll be
a fun adventure read. (I even downloaded a free Amazon copy, yay)!
Can you provide a brief, series overview here for readers?
7)
Now, I could be wrong, but it does seem that you pulled some of your
own life experiences into these tales? How did you go about
incorporating your business and environmental wisdom into these books
while still ensuring they’re interesting reads? Are there any
messages within the pages that you hope readers will take away with
them?
8)
Let’s focus now on one specific book:The Princelings of the
East.Again, can you provide us with a teeny synopsis? What was
your inspiration for this book? When you were done with the writing –
did the manuscript match your initial vision or had it changed? I
imagine if your characters embodied some of your pets’
personalities they might have given you some ‘attitude’ and just
done their own thing. *chuckle*
The inspiration came from the story we were writing online, which I mentioned earlier – we had linked universes with a tunnel between castles, and the world at the other end ran on strawberry juice. I know that was my invention, so I felt free to use it myself.
I was extremely satisfied with the book once I'd finished it (although I did improve it later, in the 2nd edition), but what I learned in the process is that characters do things of their own accord, if they are good enough characters. If you let them make decisions because of who they are, they take you down paths that may be different from those you'd imagined – and a whole lot better!
9)
Last question – it looks like you’re currently working on book
two of your BookElves Anthology, as well as book two of your
Viridian System series. Would you be willing to provide a tiny
tidbit of information about one or the other? (Or both)? Enough to
whet our appetites? *smile*
My Viridian System series is for grown-ups, although there's not much to offend older teens. I suppose anyone allowed to read James Bond would be ok with them, although it's a science fiction series with more in common with Star Trek than a spy series. My heroes Big Pete and the Swede are asteroid miners looking for a vacation, and finding trouble, and the first in the series will be out in January 2016 – The Perihelix. There's a Sampler of short stories available for 99c from 28th September. I've already started the second book, because I couldn't stop writing about them, and various ideas I wanted to include are better written down straight away these days, before I forget them!
Thank you again for sitting down with me, Jemima.
It's a pleasure, thank you for having me.
This has certainly been fun and I’m looking forward to reading my copy of The Princelings of the East.
Charline
Link for BookElves Anthology Vol 1:https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/493196
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00PMFHP7Y
Link for the Viridian System Sampler:https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/573217
Also at B&N and iTunes. Website http://viridianseries.uk
This interview has been redacted for brevity and for a discussion regarding pictures which I don't have to share with you, but I DO want to thank Charline Ratcliff for providing this interview and her generosity in sharing it with us all on the blog tour. Please, please, please, visit her on her website at www.charlineratcliff.com! Thank you!
GIVEAWAY
PRIZES
1
x $25 gift card/PayPal cash (paypal cash is much easier for me to
deliver)
1
x set of the six Princelings of the East paperbacks
5
x 1 signed print of a chapter illustration of the winner's
choice (approx. half letter-sized/A5, unmounted)
EXCERPT FROM The Princelings of the East
Fred
sat staring at the tunnel, lost in thought. George waited. This
might take a while. He could hear soft sounds of crackling flames in
the fire on the other side of the wall, and in the distance the
occasional pitter-patter of footsteps echoing down the corridors. He
wondered what would happen if they ventured out of this castle into
the tunnels.
When
he had been out in the marshes, he’d never gone a long way from
home; the castle was always visible in the
distance,
light glinting on its spires. He’d never been out overnight,
either. He identified a strange feeling inside him.
They
might be on the edge of a Great Adventure, but he wasn’t sure he
wouldn’t rather be safely tucked up in bed.
Fred
stirred. “We need to go and investigate this Great Energy Drain,”
he said. “We must find out whether it is a widespread phenomenon,
and whether the causes are known.”
George
nodded; this was elementary procedure for an investigation. “And
then?” he asked.
“And
then,” answered Fred, “we shall come up with some ideas for how
to solve it.”
“Good
idea!” said George, knowing that you can never know exactly how you
are going to do something until you have made the preliminary
investigation and tested out a few theories. But the aim was set,
and all they had to do now was
decide...
to go or not to go?
BOOK INFORMATION
TITLE
– The Princelings of the East
SERIES
– The Princelings of the East
AUTHOR
– Jemima Pett
GENRE
– MG/Fantasy/scifi
PUBLICATION
DATE – November 2011 (paperback June 2015)
LENGTH
(Pages/# Words) – 158 / 37,300
PUBLISHER
– Princelings Publications
COVER
ARTIST – Danielle English
BOOK
SYNOPSIS
The
Princelings of the East is an adventure set in a world of
labyrinthine castles, bustling inns, and the curious Isle of Hattan.
Princelings
George and Fred leave the security of their isolated castle to solve
the problem of the Great Energy Drain, meeting
the dubious businessman Hugo, the young barkeeper Victor, the
impressive Prince of Buckmore, and other movers
and shakers. Who should these two innocents trust? Their wits and each other, for sure, but when something comes
between them, each is left to his own devices, and some of those
devices are very strange indeed – and time is of the
essence.
The
Princelings of the East is the start of a saga where friendship and
intelligence are rewarded, even in the face of treachery
and deceit.
BUY
& TBR LINKS
AMAZON
KINDLE US –
http://www.amazon.com/Princelings-East-ebook/dp/B006F3SME2
AMAZON
KINDLE CA –
http://www.amazon.ca/Princelings-East-ebook/dp/B006F3SME2
AMAZON
KINDLE UK –
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Princelings-East-ebook/dp/B006F3SME2
AMAZON
PAPERBACK –
http://www.amazon.com/Princelings-East-Jemima-Pett/dp/1320685005/
BARNES
& NOBLES NOOK –
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-princelings-of-the-east-jemima-pett/1108002300
SMASHWORDS
– http://www.smashwords.com/books/view/112021
SHELFARI
–
http://www.shelfari.com/books/26506746/The-Princelings-of-the-East
BOOK
DEPOSITORY PAPERBACK -
http://www.bookdepository.com/Princelings-East-Jemima-Pett/9781320685009
This appears to be George, perhaps having a post-prandial snooze, or he's off thinking about an engineering problem.
4 comments:
Thank you so much for an amazing post on my blog tour, Viola. It's been wonderful getting to know you - and the other 6 :)
Jemima
Jemima! It was a real treat to write and I did so enjoy learning about your characters and your world-building. The reviews are coming, too, don't forget! An "unscheduled hospital stay" delayed them, but I was completely enchanted! Very well-written, thoughtful and amusing. Your characters are lovely! I'm so happy and honored to have been included!
What a delightful interview and book series! It was fun getting to know a bit about Jemima's book characters. This is an enthralling story line for youngsters, even a youngster at heart. lol Thanks sharing this with us today and best of luck to Jemima (BTW, I do remember her from the A-Z challenge)in her writing career!
Thank you, Cathy :) and thank you Viola, for managing to post on schedule even with the hospital stay. I hope you're feeling better. And I was a bit overawed when we Minions first met (as well as getting Bravo Victor out) so I'm sorry if I seemed a bit distant at first. It's been a wonderful and treasured experience. :)
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