Tim Slee's Blog: How's the Serenity? - Posts Tagged "debut"
Are you Reader Zero?!
Be the first person in the world to read the new novel from TJ Slee: The Æsirim (sequel to the BookLife Prize award winning novel 'Vanirim').
All proceeds go to Plan International, the #girlsrights organisation providing education and support to girls in 75 countries.
Check here: https://www.gofundme.com/readerzero
The winner will be the first in the world to receive a signed and dedicated first edition print copy of the new novel.
It's simple: every dollar donated gets you a ticket in the prize draw, so the more you donate, the more chance you have to win!
$20 can provide two weeks disaster relief for a girl and her family
$30 gives a child breakfast at school for a whole year. This will provide the energy and nutrition needed for a child to concentrate in class and make the most of their education.
$45 supports safety education for girls in cities to help them confidently navigate the streets.
$70 helps a young woman set up her own business.
$100 can set up a school garden in Cambodia. The garden will provide much-needed nutrition to help children’s development, and give students the energy to focus at school.
Help spread the word!
All proceeds go to Plan International, the #girlsrights organisation providing education and support to girls in 75 countries.
Check here: https://www.gofundme.com/readerzero
The winner will be the first in the world to receive a signed and dedicated first edition print copy of the new novel.
It's simple: every dollar donated gets you a ticket in the prize draw, so the more you donate, the more chance you have to win!
$20 can provide two weeks disaster relief for a girl and her family
$30 gives a child breakfast at school for a whole year. This will provide the energy and nutrition needed for a child to concentrate in class and make the most of their education.
$45 supports safety education for girls in cities to help them confidently navigate the streets.
$70 helps a young woman set up her own business.
$100 can set up a school garden in Cambodia. The garden will provide much-needed nutrition to help children’s development, and give students the energy to focus at school.
Help spread the word!
Goodreads Giveaway: Bless Me Father
On Goodreads this weekend, you can win an ebook copy of the PW BookLife thriller genre winner 'Bless Me Father''!
https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/sh...
Read the wonderfully tongue-in-cheek spy novel that topped the Publishers Weekly BookLife Prize shortlist for crime/thriller novels!
“This marvelous story, brilliantly written, chronicles the exploits of Charlie Jones, a former member of Australia’s Security Service and currently a novice in Mercy Sisters, where she is slated to soon become a full-fledged nun. When the Pope decides to visit, the Archbishop taps Sr. Jones to oversee security and what follows are highly amusing escapades that put this unorthodox and extremely intuitive nun on the trail of would-be Pope killers. This story has it all – a logical and credible plot, brilliant writing, engaging and well-developed characters, and an appealing heroine. 10/10” (PW BookLife Prize assessment)
Jason Pinter
Best selling Author:
“Highly original, well-written, with an engaging, sparkplug of a heroine in Security Service agent-turned-novitiate Charlie Jones. There’s a little Lisbeth Salander, a little Stephanie Plum, but Slee creates a world that is unique, immersive, and above all fun to lose yourself in. By the time I finished reading, I wanted to start from the beginning with Charlie Jones’s first story, and was eager to see what comes next.”
If you aren't lucky enough to win, just follow my author page - I often have dollar deals!
https://www.goodreads.com/giveaway/sh...
Read the wonderfully tongue-in-cheek spy novel that topped the Publishers Weekly BookLife Prize shortlist for crime/thriller novels!
“This marvelous story, brilliantly written, chronicles the exploits of Charlie Jones, a former member of Australia’s Security Service and currently a novice in Mercy Sisters, where she is slated to soon become a full-fledged nun. When the Pope decides to visit, the Archbishop taps Sr. Jones to oversee security and what follows are highly amusing escapades that put this unorthodox and extremely intuitive nun on the trail of would-be Pope killers. This story has it all – a logical and credible plot, brilliant writing, engaging and well-developed characters, and an appealing heroine. 10/10” (PW BookLife Prize assessment)
Jason Pinter
Best selling Author:
“Highly original, well-written, with an engaging, sparkplug of a heroine in Security Service agent-turned-novitiate Charlie Jones. There’s a little Lisbeth Salander, a little Stephanie Plum, but Slee creates a world that is unique, immersive, and above all fun to lose yourself in. By the time I finished reading, I wanted to start from the beginning with Charlie Jones’s first story, and was eager to see what comes next.”
If you aren't lucky enough to win, just follow my author page - I often have dollar deals!
Themes in Taking Tom Murray Home: The Power of Community
In Denmark I live in a cul de sac where the age of the 20 or so residents ranges from nine weeks (we have two babies in the street) to ninety years (we have two nonagenarians!). When people are on holiday, we watch each other's houses, water each other's plants, empty each other's mailboxes. Twice a year, for Easter and late summer, we get together for street parties. When my wife and I had to go away recently for a few days and leave our teenage son on his own, we knew that if anything happened he could knock on any of the neighbours' doors for help and he'd get it.
If you're reading this and thinking, 'would never happen here', then try organising a street party and see what happens, then decide.
We are herd animals. We thrive in hives. We flock together in families, in football clubs, on media we call social for exactly that reason. Why?
A clear reason is the age-old adage that we stand stronger together. Like arctic penguins huddled against a killer storm, we can be picked off if we stand alone, but we can get through almost anything together.
In Taking Tom Murray Home, a family is thrown off its farm, and the community rallies around them. It doesn't always take a tragedy for this sense of community to emerge, but tragedies bring the herd together like nothing else: bushfires, floods, storms, funerals.
And the way we do it in Australia is just so very Australian. It's done quietly. Without fanfare. It's almost assumed. We pitch in. We dig deep. We turn up. We don't expect praise. We just get it done because we always have, and that's who we are. If you think I'm romanticising, and the world just isn't like that anymore, I can point you to a hundred different proofs that it is, but I really like this one:
http://rightnow.org.au/opinion-3/aust...
Another, more personal example, will always stick in my mind. As a journalist covering the Ash Wednesday bushfires I wrote a story called 'the hero of Yarrabee road'. It was about a guy who braved flame and fire to help evacuate people who had been trapped on Yarabee road in the Adelaide Hills by the speed of the blaze, and in the process completely trashed the classic Holden ute they were restoring, getting their neighbours to safety when they could have just made a run for it themselves.
But they wouldn't let me use their real names, and they never got a medal, because in typical Australian fashion they said, 'anyone would have done the same.'
Tom Murray's widow could have driven her horse and carriage and coffin to Melbourne on her own and might have had the same impact. But I couldn't for a minute imagine a scenario where she would have decided to do that, and others would not have joined in. Most of the people who join her in the novel are older (you might have noticed that), partly because they have the time, but also because they've lived through enough to know that alone with your kids and a coffin on a highway is not a place you want to be. Surrounded by friends, neighbours and fellow travellers is.
I know this is no radical new thought, but to me it's one of the best parts of human nature (or animal nature?) and something I definitely wanted to show in Taking Tom Murray Home.
If you're reading this and thinking, 'would never happen here', then try organising a street party and see what happens, then decide.
We are herd animals. We thrive in hives. We flock together in families, in football clubs, on media we call social for exactly that reason. Why?
A clear reason is the age-old adage that we stand stronger together. Like arctic penguins huddled against a killer storm, we can be picked off if we stand alone, but we can get through almost anything together.
In Taking Tom Murray Home, a family is thrown off its farm, and the community rallies around them. It doesn't always take a tragedy for this sense of community to emerge, but tragedies bring the herd together like nothing else: bushfires, floods, storms, funerals.
And the way we do it in Australia is just so very Australian. It's done quietly. Without fanfare. It's almost assumed. We pitch in. We dig deep. We turn up. We don't expect praise. We just get it done because we always have, and that's who we are. If you think I'm romanticising, and the world just isn't like that anymore, I can point you to a hundred different proofs that it is, but I really like this one:
http://rightnow.org.au/opinion-3/aust...
Another, more personal example, will always stick in my mind. As a journalist covering the Ash Wednesday bushfires I wrote a story called 'the hero of Yarrabee road'. It was about a guy who braved flame and fire to help evacuate people who had been trapped on Yarabee road in the Adelaide Hills by the speed of the blaze, and in the process completely trashed the classic Holden ute they were restoring, getting their neighbours to safety when they could have just made a run for it themselves.
But they wouldn't let me use their real names, and they never got a medal, because in typical Australian fashion they said, 'anyone would have done the same.'
Tom Murray's widow could have driven her horse and carriage and coffin to Melbourne on her own and might have had the same impact. But I couldn't for a minute imagine a scenario where she would have decided to do that, and others would not have joined in. Most of the people who join her in the novel are older (you might have noticed that), partly because they have the time, but also because they've lived through enough to know that alone with your kids and a coffin on a highway is not a place you want to be. Surrounded by friends, neighbours and fellow travellers is.
I know this is no radical new thought, but to me it's one of the best parts of human nature (or animal nature?) and something I definitely wanted to show in Taking Tom Murray Home.
1,000 km and hundreds of smiles
A big thankyou to all the lovely folks I met on my recent 1,109 km tour of Australia's SW Victoria! Looking forward to meeting you all again I hope, when 'Taking Tom Murray Home' comes out in July. Not enough space in the collage for everyone but will feature stories and videos later! Will give a small shoutout though to those who hosted me so kindly, Ironbird Bookshop (Port Fairy), Collins Booksellers (Warrnambool), Cow Lick Bookshop (Colac), Great Escape Books (Airey's Inlet), Dymocks Geelong, The Bookshop at Queenscliff, Antipodes Bookshop & Gallery (Sorrento), Farrells Bookshop (Mornington), Robinsons Bookshop HQ Carrum Downs, Thesaurus Booksellers (Brighton), Dymocks Melbourne (Melbourne), Robinsons Bookshop (Melbourne), Readings (Carlton) and not to forget Kim and Leah of Heartwood Horses and Leading Senior Constable Leo Finnegan of the Portland Victoria Police! And to the wonderful people at HarperCollins Books for organising ...
(Proceeds from Taking Tom Murray Home will go to Plan International Australia).
(Proceeds from Taking Tom Murray Home will go to Plan International Australia).

Cover preview: Taking Tom Murray Home
Very excited to reveal the cover design for my upcoming novel 'Taking Tom Murray Home', coming out on HarperCollins in August!
A quirky tale deserved a quirky cover and I think designer Laura Collins really nailed it...
Have a read of the book blurb below, then let me know what you think!
The winner of the inaugural Banjo Prize, Taking Tom Murray Home is a funny, moving, bittersweet Australian story of fires, families and the restorative power of community.
Bankrupt dairy farmer Tom Murray decides he'd rather sell off his herd and burn down his own house than hand them over to the bank. But something goes tragically wrong, and Tom dies in the blaze. His wife, Dawn, doesn't want him to have died for nothing and decides to hold a funeral procession for Tom as a protest, driving 350km from Yardley in country Victoria to bury him in Melbourne where he was born. To make a bigger impact she agrees with some neighbours to put his coffin on a horse and cart and take it slow - real slow.
But on the night of their departure, someone burns down the local bank. And as the motley funeral procession passes through Victoria, there are more mysterious arson attacks. Dawn has five days to get to Melbourne before she has to bury her husband. Five days, five more towns, and a state ready to explode in flames...
Told with a laconic, deadpan wit, Taking Tom Murray Home is a timely, thought-provoking, heart-warming, quintessentially Australian story like no other. It's a novel about grief, pain, anger and loss, yes, but it's also about hope - and how community, friends and love trump pain and anger, every time.
A quirky tale deserved a quirky cover and I think designer Laura Collins really nailed it...
Have a read of the book blurb below, then let me know what you think!
The winner of the inaugural Banjo Prize, Taking Tom Murray Home is a funny, moving, bittersweet Australian story of fires, families and the restorative power of community.
Bankrupt dairy farmer Tom Murray decides he'd rather sell off his herd and burn down his own house than hand them over to the bank. But something goes tragically wrong, and Tom dies in the blaze. His wife, Dawn, doesn't want him to have died for nothing and decides to hold a funeral procession for Tom as a protest, driving 350km from Yardley in country Victoria to bury him in Melbourne where he was born. To make a bigger impact she agrees with some neighbours to put his coffin on a horse and cart and take it slow - real slow.
But on the night of their departure, someone burns down the local bank. And as the motley funeral procession passes through Victoria, there are more mysterious arson attacks. Dawn has five days to get to Melbourne before she has to bury her husband. Five days, five more towns, and a state ready to explode in flames...
Told with a laconic, deadpan wit, Taking Tom Murray Home is a timely, thought-provoking, heart-warming, quintessentially Australian story like no other. It's a novel about grief, pain, anger and loss, yes, but it's also about hope - and how community, friends and love trump pain and anger, every time.

3 ways to manage the pressure of 'the dreaded second novel'!

As a first-time novelist, you are asked a lot about (and worry about) 'what is your next one about'? Even before the first one is out! Talk about pressure! So, I'm writing THREE 'next ones'. Which is typical me. The first, which I titled 'Deep River', is in the bag, first draft done.
It starts like this:
ENROLMENT
This is a tale of three Henrys. One was young, adventurous and trusting. Another was an alcoholic, opioid abusing, empty hulk saved from self-destruction against his own wishes. The third, is me.
***
I'm also working on an alternative version of that one. A totally different take on the same theme, a little more suspense, than dark humour. It's about 2/3 done. Let's call it 'Deep River 2' even thought it's almost completely different - it starts like this:
SOL VISTA
I like it quiet. I like the soft, dusty stillness of people ageing. I like walking down the frangipani bedecked pathways, past the apartment doors with just a television burbling away or someone singing nursery rhymes softly to themselves. It used to be peaceful around here, but lately there’s been way too much yelling and screaming.
***
The third novel, I just started in Feb, but it's also 2/3 done because it's turning out to be such fun to write, that it's almost writing itself. I'm calling it 'Goat Island' and it starts like this:
1994, SUMMER
Sometimes you choose a place, and sometimes a place chooses you. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not one of those hippie earth-mother Gaiea freaks. But you have to admit there’s a certain power about the land we live on. Geothermal, tectonic, gravitational. It won’t be ignored, if it decides to assert itself.
***
All three will be finished soon (by summer I hope). I wonder if any of them will make it into the big wide world?
Books + Publishing review of Tom Murray
Joanne Shiells of Australian Books + Publishing just dropped a very nice review of Taking Tom Murray Home coming out this August!
Easily readable, highly entertaining and destined for the screen...
"This debut novel and winner of HarperCollins’ Banjo Prize is based on the ingenious premise of a funeral-protest that raises awareness of the pressures facing dairy farmers from banks, supermarkets and the cult of cheap milk. After Tom Murray accidentally kills himself burning his farmhouse down to prevent the bank from getting it, his wife, Dawn, decides to take his body via horse and cart on a five-day journey to Melbourne. Along the way, the entourage attracts wanted and unwanted attention, a colourful medley of characters and a sizeable hashtag following. Tom’s twin children, Jack and Jenny, are united by the belief their dad is still alive and their analgesia, an inability to feel pain. Narrative tension increases as the journey progresses, with the police trying to stop it, the media fuelling it and a mystery following it. Tim Slee celebrates Australia’s rebel spirit with references to Henry Lawson and Ned Kelly, and unearths the stoicism, perseverance and humour of our rural character. Easily readable, highly entertaining and destined for the screen, this book should have broad appeal. It typifies a true Australian yarn but points to more serious problems in society, especially the issues facing those on the land.
4 STARS
(Joanne Shiells is a former book buyer and a former editor of Books+Publishing)
Preorders:
https://www.booktopia.com.au/taking-t...
https://www.amazon.com/Taking-Tom-Mur...
http://www.collinsbooks.com.au/book/T...
https://www.dymocks.com.au/book/takin...
Easily readable, highly entertaining and destined for the screen...
"This debut novel and winner of HarperCollins’ Banjo Prize is based on the ingenious premise of a funeral-protest that raises awareness of the pressures facing dairy farmers from banks, supermarkets and the cult of cheap milk. After Tom Murray accidentally kills himself burning his farmhouse down to prevent the bank from getting it, his wife, Dawn, decides to take his body via horse and cart on a five-day journey to Melbourne. Along the way, the entourage attracts wanted and unwanted attention, a colourful medley of characters and a sizeable hashtag following. Tom’s twin children, Jack and Jenny, are united by the belief their dad is still alive and their analgesia, an inability to feel pain. Narrative tension increases as the journey progresses, with the police trying to stop it, the media fuelling it and a mystery following it. Tim Slee celebrates Australia’s rebel spirit with references to Henry Lawson and Ned Kelly, and unearths the stoicism, perseverance and humour of our rural character. Easily readable, highly entertaining and destined for the screen, this book should have broad appeal. It typifies a true Australian yarn but points to more serious problems in society, especially the issues facing those on the land.
4 STARS
(Joanne Shiells is a former book buyer and a former editor of Books+Publishing)
Preorders:
https://www.booktopia.com.au/taking-t...
https://www.amazon.com/Taking-Tom-Mur...
http://www.collinsbooks.com.au/book/T...
https://www.dymocks.com.au/book/takin...
How's the Serenity?
A blog about the fun of balancing life, work, family, friends, writing and karma... mostly writing and karma.
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