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Coming Home to Roseford Villas by Fay Keenan #Review

  Today we return to the series by Fay Keenan set in the Somerset village of Roseford. Coming Home to Roseford Villas was published by Boldwood Books on 12th April.   Aurora Henderson and Leo McKendrick were love’s young dream when they first dated as teenagers. But like many a first love, parents, life, and distance got in the way, and the couple lost touch. Now, twenty years later, Aurora – Rory to her friends – needs a break. Burnt out from her teaching career and longing to write a novel, Rory heads to the idyllic village of Roseford for a summer of writing and relaxation. Leo needs a change too. Ex-pat life in Australia has come to a sticky end so the opportunity to run his family’s B&B, Roseford Villas, for the summer is too good to turn down. Neither Rory nor Leo believe in fate, but when Leo opens the door to his latest guest, he might just have to reconsider. And when a sultry summer fills with nostalgia and memories and six weeks flies by too fast, love’s young

Know Me Now by C J Carver ** Blog Tour Author Post and Review**

Welcome to Books, Life and Everything today, where C J Carver is letting us in on things she keeps in mind when writing. I love hearing from authors about their writing and it is great to be able to welcome her today as part of the celebrations for her novel, Know Me Now. 


Five things I keep in mind while I’m writing

Over the years my writing has become instinctive, but only due to working my socks off and learning my trade.  When I first started out I really had to think about what I was doing, and below are five things I made sure I kept in mind when I was writing, anything to make sure I wasn’t boring the reader!  My goal was, and always will be, to produce a cracking and unputdownable read that isn’t just thought provoking, but thrilling.


Tension

Is there a question on every page?  Are my characters on edge?  On a quest of some sort?  If not, why not?  From the opening page, the story has to hold a reader’s attention 100% and keep that attention until the very last sentence.  I try and make sure my characters are always actively doing something, and not having events happen to them.  For example, when Dan Forrester in my new novel Know Me Now discovers his father didn’t die of a heart-attack and that he was murdered, he sets to find out why, pushing the story forward at a terrific rate.


Show don’t tell

As a new writer, I was told this again and again.  Exposition kills a story stone-dead.  However, a writer still needs to impart information, it’s just how we choose to do it that makes the difference between a page-turner and something less exciting.  Dialogue is a really useful way of imparting information especially if two characters are having an argument or a fight.


Don’t make things easy

If my character wants to find something out and uses the phone, it’s useful to have the person they’re ringing unavailable so that later they ring back at a really awkward time, creating immediate tension.  I try not to hand things on a plate to my characters, but make them really work for things.


Are the obstacles getting bigger as the story progresses?

From making things awkward on the phone (see 3!) to characters having disagreements with one another, each event should increase in emotional tension for the reader.  I can’t have a huge chase scene in the middle of the book if that is more exciting than the shootout at the end.  It’s all about building the story to its climax.


Cliff-hangers

Having a cliff-hanger at the end of each chapter (from tiny to huge) now comes naturally to me, but when I first started writing, I really had to concentrate on creating a question or some kind of thruster that would make the reader turn the page.  It’s about depriving the reader of something he or she needs to know, not for ever, but just for a couple of pages . . . then they get their reward when that question is answered.  But  not the big one, though, which isn’t revealed until the very last page.

©CJ Carver 2017

Thanks so much, it's fantastic to hear from you- let's find out more about Know Me Now...

 A SUICIDE. A MURDER. A CONSPIRACY.
DIGGING UP THE PAST CAN BE DEADLY . . .

A thirteen-year-old boy commits suicide.

A sixty-five-year old man dies of a heart attack.

Dan Forrester, ex-MI5 officer, is connected to them both.

And when he discovers that his godson and his father have been murdered, he teams up with his old friend, DC Lucy Davies, to find answers.

But as the pair investigate, they unravel a dark and violent mystery stretching decades into the past and uncover a terrible secret.

A secret someone will do anything to keep buried . . .


About the Author (taken from her Website)

"I have always loved stories, and as a child I read voraciously, as did my family. When I invited a school friend to stay during the summer holidays, she later admitted to finding us very peculiar because we read our books over breakfast. No conversation, just the rustling of pages and the crunch of our Cornflakes. ”
 CJ Carver is a half-English, half-kiwi, author living just outside Bath. She lived in Australia for ten years before taking up long-distance rally driving – she has driven London to Saigon, London to Cape Town, and completed 14,500 miles on the Inca Trail.

Since then she has written nine critically acclaimed novels that have been published in the UK, USA and translated into several languages.  CJ’s first novel Blood Junction won the CWA Debut Dagger and was short listed for the USA Barry Award for Best Crime Fiction Novel of the Year.  Spare Me the Truth, the first in the Forrester and Davies series, was shortlisted for the 2017 Ngaio Marsh Best Crime Novel Award.

CJ is a co-founder and one of the first judges for the Women’s World Car of The Year Award.
CJ loves hearing from her fans. Drop her a line at cj@cjcarver.com

You can follow Charlotte here:  Website  |  Twitter  |  Facebook

Thanks to Emily Burns and C J Carver for a copy of the book and a place on the tour.  

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