Unknown Books? - Let's Read Them Club! discussion

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Author Q&A Sessions > AUTHOR Q&A SESSION: Irene M. Redpath (April 26 - April 28)

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message 1: by Ronyell (last edited Apr 23, 2011 09:41PM) (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
Hello!! Feel free to ask questions to Irene M. Redpath, author of A Day to Go Gently and Flowers for Alys.


message 2: by Ezraela-Baht (new)

Ezraela-Baht (chosonwhun) Thanks but I haven't read the book and is not familiar with it so I wouldn't know what to ask @


message 3: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments Don't worry, Fredericka - I'm not familiar with Author Q&A Sessions! This will be my first, so if you do come along we can all learn something new together.

:-)


message 4: by Ezraela-Baht (new)

Ezraela-Baht (chosonwhun) LOL thank you I guess it'll help if I knew her genre


message 5: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
I guess with Author Q&A sessions, you can ask the author anything you want and it doesn't necessarily has to do with their books, especially if you hadn't read them yet, but it would be a great way to know the author better! This is the group's first Q&A session, so we'll see how well this goes!!


message 6: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments If it helps, there's an independent review of my latest, "Flowers for Alys", at this address:

http://oldenglishrose.dmi.me.uk/2011/...

I tend to write in the whatever-comes-into-my-head genre, to be honest. They're all a bit different from the one before!


message 7: by Ezraela-Baht (new)

Ezraela-Baht (chosonwhun) Whatever comes to mind genre" LOL I like that


message 8: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments I like to keep everybody - including myself - guessing!


message 9: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments If anyone wants to read at least a bit of my books before asking questions, you can download the sample chapters from Amazon, or go to Shelfari: http://www.shelfari.com/books/2108729... to read sample chapters and some other information.

See you later! ;-)


message 10: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
Thank you Irene! I'll check it out! See you tomorrow! :D


message 11: by Ice (new)

Ice Bear (neilar) I would like to know where the inspiration comes from, and what technical skills are required and perhaps some soft skills (patience, endurance) as well :-) like bringing up children I guess. Given a base of Yorkshire and Scotland for me would be a source, as I always feel uplifted when returning up North !


message 12: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments Inspiration is important - I've never sat down to write something just because it happened to be Wednesday, or because the electric bill had arrived! But where it comes from is more complicated to describe.

I started writing at about four, but the first thing I still have is a poem I wrote when I was twelve. I saw something on the way to school which interested me, and again on the way home, and that turned into a poem.

One book was started when I was on holiday in a new place. The beauty of the location captured me and a story began in my head, so I wrote it down. Well, I wrote half the story, then put it away when the holiday ended. It was over twenty years later that I finished it!

Last year I was between books, struggling a bit, when a completely different story came to me, and this one came in the voice of the narrator. I could hear her voice telling me about her life, and I had to keep writing it down to find out what happened next! That book happened quite quickly, and was great fun to write.

There has to be a thought, an idea to be the initial spark, I think, but once it catches light my imagination takes over.

As far as technical skills go, language has always been a passion for me. I love words, the shape and the feel of them, and I'm one of those people who gets very annoyed about sloppy grammar. So anything I write tends to be polished to within an inch of its life! Although I will admit to being mortified once to discover one tiny spelling mistake, and I re-published that book in all three editions to correct that one missing letter.

Patience is something that tends to come with age, I think. I have brought up children (and animals of various kinds) and you have to learn to give them time to grow. Books can be more difficult - there are times when I wish I was a faster typist! It does get harder when you're nearly finished with a book, and you really, really want to put that last full stop in. A bit like the last stages of pregnancy - but neither can be rushed!

I was born in Yorkshire, but I didn't live there long. We used to visit relatives there, and I do enjoy going back, but I do that less nowadays. To all intents and purposes I'm Scottish now, having lived here for a very long time. For most of my life I've had a view of hills from my window, and I would miss them now.


message 13: by Ice (new)

Ice Bear (neilar) Thank you for the extensive reply, and for its 'readability' to someone for whom language, even their own is a challenge - more persperation than inspiration and my spelling is atrocious.

What would be your book for a Desert Island ?


message 14: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments Oh Heavens . . . that's a tall order! Am I allowed The Bible and Shakespeare as extras? That narrows it down a little.

My instinctive reply would be a request for a very big, thick, blank notebook, to write my own . . . but I would get very grumpy with that on my less-inspired days.

Jane Austen, the Brontes, A S Byatt, Thomas Hardy, Barbara Pym, Antonia White . . . drama, poetry, fiction or fact - it's so hard to narrow down to just one book.

I don't suppose I'd be allowed a nice leather-bound set of Encyclopaedia Britannica, would I? No? A huge book of quotations would be lovely, too, because those snippets would remind me of all the poems that are in my head.

But - if I have to choose one single volume (sob!) I think (today) I shall plump for the wonderful "Jane Eyre". I first read it at the age of eight and, while I didn't understand everything in it, it drew me in to a spell of mystery and excitement which has remained with me. I still enjoy it, despite watching several different versions on television over the years.

I much prefer it to "Wuthering Heights" - Heathcliff is such a brute, and Cathy is impossibly selfish! - and even the terror of the Red Room might lessen if I were to be imprisoned there on a daily basis!

I'd better stop there . . . other books are knocking on my head, demanding to be let on to the Island too . . . !


message 15: by Ice (new)

Ice Bear (neilar) I guess you could have a 'lending library' raft anchored offshore.

Would you ever want anyone to write your biography ?


message 16: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments Yes - but only if I had the power of veto!!! Most of my life is so tedious that it would send my reader to sleep. When I become rich and famous I shall of course produce the Authorised Version myself . . .

Love your library raft suggestion, Ice. Brilliant!


message 17: by Sixties (new)

Sixties | 2 comments Fredericka wrote: "Thanks but I haven't read the book and is not familiar with it so I wouldn't know what to ask @"

Ice wrote: "Thank you for the extensive reply, and for its 'readability' to someone for whom language, even their own is a challenge - more persperation than inspiration and my spelling is atrocious.

What w..."


Was there any particular person who inspired the story behind A Day To Go Gently?
It was written with such compassion & knowledge of the subject, I felt there had to have been a real person that it was based upon?


message 18: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments Not really, no. I've spent many years researching our family history, so I've absorbed all sorts of events and personalities from that, and the story must have contained some things I've discovered there.

As always there are some events in the story which have references to people I've known, but as far as I know it didn't all happen to one person.

Well, except for that voice in my head. I must admit, I have wondered once or twice whether she was once on this Earth too.


message 19: by Sixties (new)

Sixties | 2 comments Irene wrote: "Not really, no. I've spent many years researching our family history, so I've absorbed all sorts of events and personalities from that, and the story must have contained some things I've discovered..."

I think that research showed in Flowers for Alys as well - it was almost as if you had lived in those times & those places. I gather you have a lot of admiration for the way of life back then, as tough as it was ?


message 20: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments I have a lot of admiration for the people who lived then - the things they had to put up with, and yet they seemed to cope somehow.

I think women had a tougher time in many ways than the men of old, and it must have made them stronger.

Oddly enough, although it might not seem very likely, there was probably more of Me in "Flowers for Alys" than in the others. Some unlikely events in the book genuinely happened to me, not necessarily in quite the same circumstances or the same order.


message 21: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
The section I've read sounds interesting Irene! Is "Flowers for Alys" a time travel tale?


message 22: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments No, it all happens in the distant past. I'm afraid I haven't got around to writing about time travel yet.

;-)


message 23: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments The story does unfold over several years, but it moves forward through them, with the characters getting a bit older as it goes along.


message 24: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
Oh, it's that kind of story! Sounds interesting!


message 25: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments I'm always a bit vague about giving actual dates and places, and this one is no exception, but I think I'd put it somewhere in the mediaeval range.

When I'm working on family history I have to be so precise about names and dates and places - when it comes to fiction I like to leave a little bit of fuzziness around the facts. In that case it's the story that matters most.


message 26: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
Yeah, it is important that the story comes into play so that way the audience would be able to get into the story.


message 27: by Ice (last edited Apr 27, 2011 01:51AM) (new)

Ice Bear (neilar) I now remember where Penicuik is ! When we visit relatives in Edinburgh by Car we go up West on the M74 and cut across the A702. So I understand the impact of the local geography.

What else would you like to write about ?


message 28: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments Yes, there are plenty of hills in these parts! TV reception is terrible, but I'd rather watch the sun setting between the hills anyway.

The next book is always an unknown quantity. Sometimes I start on several ideas, in the hope that one will click. At the moment I have three beginnings amongst my files - I think I know which one will grow into a book, but I don't like to say too much at this stage, just in case.

If this one does make it, it will be more up to date than "Flowers for Alys". The most recent one yet, really, although I'm not sure I'll ever get quite into the computer age . . .


message 29: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
What's your most recent book?


message 30: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments "Flowers for Alys" is the most recent fiction title - published towards the end of last year - but I do family history things in between. Did a huge version of our Tree not so long ago.


message 31: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
Wow!!! That's interesting!!


message 32: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments The family history has taken up a lot of my time . . . I don't think I'd better admit how many years I've been up to the elbows in that!


message 33: by Toni (new)

Toni Nelson (goodreadscomtoninelson) | 8 comments Sorry, I missed it... I'm working 12 hours a day!


message 34: by Ronyell (new)

Ronyell (rabbitearsblog) | 492 comments Mod
That's alright Toni!!


message 35: by Irene (new)

Irene (ladyraven) | 28 comments I'm still around, Toni - if there's anything you want to ask me, fire away. (If I don't answer you straight away, I will in the morning.)


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