SISTER SCRIBES’ GUEST: MORTON S GRAY ON WRITING AS A MUM AND A CARER

Today I’m joined by author friend Morton S Gray who writes romance with a mystery to solve for Choc Lit all set in her fictional seaside town of Borteen. The better I get to know Morton, the more we seem to have in common, but I am frankly in awe of her daily regime – it’s an absolute inspiration!

I often hear people say that they could write a book, but they’re too busy. So, how do you fit writing into a busy day? I thought I’d give blog readers an idea of how I personally do it. Don’t get me wrong, there are days when I don’t manage a word, but here is an example of a good day!

When I started to compose this post, I realised how important thinking time contributes to the number of words I manage to get down.

Alarm sounds at six o’clock, ten minutes thinking time about latest work in progress, book seven, a Christmas novella for November 2021 publication. Continue thinking in the shower where ideas really begin to flow stimulated somehow by the scents of the shower products. Dressing, I jot down ideas from the shower so I don’t forget, e.g. “dancing on the beach scene” “shock event near the Christmas tree”.

Drive son to station and on way back mull over how to write on from my earlier writing prompts. Breakfast, sit at pc and type. I’m now so ready to write that I can produce about 800 words really quickly.

Tidy house, washing, dishwasher. Early walk with homeworking hubbie. Maybe float a few ideas about my plot to see what he can add. He works in IT but can often give a different and male perspective. We once outlined a complete murder mystery on our walk, but I’m yet to write that one. Other ideas often come to me when walking too.

Back to computer and write. Around 400 words this time.

I visit my mother who has dementia every day after lunch. Sort out problems, shopping and tablets. Mom is a surprisingly good sounding board for my writing too. She’s usually reading one of my books and the plots are always new because she can’t remember the stories.

Once home I tackle admin, phone calls, tweeting, Facebooking and emails. If I’m lucky another quick writing session, let’s say100 words.

Back to station to collect son, listen to music on the way back as lyrics will jump out at me to use as writing prompts. I’ll make notes on my phone waiting at the station, but little time to write until after our evening meal.

Usually add another 300 words in the evening with my laptop on my knee and one eye on a television programme. After writing from notes on phone, I’ll review what I’ve written so far, add extra words and description.

So, by bedtime I should have an extra 1,600 words to show for my day. If it’s a good day sometimes nearer 2,000. Off to bed, but crucially before I turn out the light, I think about any sticky points in the manuscript and often have an answer in my head by morning.

Sleep and repeat.

Morton S Gray’s fifth book, Christmas at the Little Beach Café, was published in November. You can catch up with Morton, her blog and her books on her website www.mortonsgray.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Delicario to the rescue – I now have hampers sorted for Christmas – Annie Clarke

Frost Magazine was so impressed with the sample hamper from Delicario.com that it seemed the ideal solution for some  family members, with the added bonus of our personal messages included with the hamper. So, we collapsed into  absolutely trouble free ordering and extremely helpful advice which was a boon for us at one of our busiest times of year.

It was also great to hear from them the other day with some images of the founder, Marco Rosa and co-founder Alex Scasny manning the Delicario  farmer’s market stall at Rye, at which they virtually sold out (we’re not surprised). The produce is of the highest quality, and so interesting and we urge you to try both the wines and the food, all accessed from small European artisan providers. And remember, though their Christmas service and deliveries are spot on, Delicario are not just for Christmas but all year round.

                                  

 

At Frost Magazine we are in awe of how many small artisan businesses have thrived during this strange year, by improving their online arm, and even locally here, in my home town, the small shops and providers swung into action overnight, and set up efficient delivery services, with online, email and telephone ordering. Now that they are opening again they are stronger still, as they have two threads to the business and are rushed off their feet.

Bravo all of you, and on another note, if you haven’t been to Rye, do try and go when all is sort of back to normal. It is an enchanting town, and it’s where E F Benson set the Mapp and Lucia series, which is sniggeringly quirky (though he called it Tilling). Benson moved to Rye, (Lamb House) in 1918 and eventually became Mayor. The books became a  TV series with the glorious Prunella Scales, Geraldine McEwan, and Nigel Hawthorne… et al. Heaven. I have the box set, it is nearly worn out.

And of course, remember, remember – you are still in time to place an order with Delicario

Hilltop is taking Christmas orders for delivery of its wonderful range of Honey and Maple Syrups up until 18th December. Hurry hurry…

Hilltop is an independent British company, with a down-to-earth passion that comes across, trust me, in their range of honey and maple syrups. This company based in Wales was founded in 2011 by Scott Davies after a back injury diverted him from his ‘proper’ job. As luck would have it, Scott  received a bee hive as a birthday gift, which led to his passion for bees, and their honey. First he sold to friends, then local shops, and within a few years was supplying farm shops and delis across the country.
Frost Magazine LOVES to hear of, and write about, entrepreneurs who introduce us to their artisan products, so of course, and here we are, talking of Hilltop’s honey. Soon Hilltop Honey as it was then known secured listings in Sainsbury’s Holland& Barratt, Selfridges, Amazon and Ocado, extending its range in the process to include speciality and Manuka honey, along with bee pollen and cut comb. And all seriously good.
In addition, with an eye to sustainability, their products are available in reusable glass jars or recyclable squeeze bottles. Within four short years, Hilltop Honey received the Soil Association seal of approval and launched a new range of organic honey.
2020 has seen our lives take many twists and turns, and so too Hilltop Honey, which had rebranded to be called Hilltop, with a new look and logo but the same passion, and high standards. It is based high up at Newtown, Mid-Wales with 51 staff, with an ethos that dictates that COMMUNITY  is at the heart of everything the business does. from sponsoring the local football team to donating 25% of sales of its Adopt a Bee initiative to the Honeypot Charity.
So, onto the  honey and maple syrup:
Hilltop honey is pure and natural, and products involve grainy, runny or set variants. The colour, aroma and taste of each honey is completely different, as the Frost Magazine team can vouch, as bees gather from a diverse variety of flowers. Every drop is perfect in its own unique way and is about as close and unspoilt as you can get to eating it straight from the hive.
New to market, Hilltop has recently launched Amber and Very Dark Maple Syrups, perfect for pouring over pancakes and wonderful on waffles. Frost Magazine team members were mostly new to Maple Syrup, but loved it. Of course one of us had been told by an American friend it should be lathered on pancakes but we found it was pretty perfect on scones.
I loved the organic Acacia honey, the organic Blossom, the MGO rated Manuka honey…  Well, every honey actually and syrup, so best stop there. Suddenly the samples were gone, vanished as the team took their favourites, but I had secreted the Manuka in a drawer, so very there. And home it came with me, where in my garden  I had planted plants loved by bees two years ago, and make a habit of spreading  bee bombs where I can, so I have to declare I was was already a bee preserver, and honey lover, and even more so now.
Check the prices, delivery and numerous excellent products HERE

Natalie Jayne Peeke, our West Country Correspondent, chooses her top books of 2020.

2020 will be a year to remember, there is no doubt about it, it is a year that my grandchildren will ask me about. It has been  turbulent, full of extreme highs and lows and I believe that it is vital that we try to find the good in the bad – after all every cloud has a silver lining, in the words of Winston Churchill “Attitude is a little thing that makes a big difference”


Reading is my form of escaping the real world if only for a short while, I would like to share with you my top books that have helped me through this year. First up is the Twins of Auschwitz by Eva Mozes Kor. 

When Eva Mozes Kor and her family arrived at Auschwitz in 1944, they were immediately separated. Her parents and sisters were taken to the gas chambers, while Eva and her twin, Miriam, were herded into the care of Dr. Josef Mengele, who quickly became known as ‘the angel of death’.  They were 10 years old.  In a narrative told simply, with emotion and astonishing restraint, The Twins of Auschwitz shares the inspirational story of a child’s endurance and survival in the face of truly extraordinary evil.   I flew through this book and it gave me a huge wakeup call, yes life is hard now but is no where near as trying as I can imagine it was during world war two. It is so beautifully written I found myself simply unable to put it down, I was forever telling myself “one more chapter” I simply had to know what happened to Eva and Miriam.

I found strength from this book which is why it has made my list. I would recommend this  to fans of historical memoirs, biographies and auto biographies. If you were captivated by “The tattooist of Auschwitz” then this book is for you.

Next up is Wedding bells on the home front by Annie Clarke

March 1942: As the war continues, wedding bells are ringing for the factory girls . . .  Sarah is happily settling into married life with new husband Stan, whilst Fran is busy planning her upcoming wedding to sweetheart Davey, who’s still conscripted to Bletchley Park. With limited resources, the girls must make do to create the perfect day. Meanwhile, Beth has other things on her mind. She hasn’t heard from her husband Bob since he returned to the navy, and she’s starting to fear the worst. And new friend Viola is still recovering from a nasty accident.  Life on the home front can be challenging, but with the support of one another, the factory girls can get through anything.

This sensational book is the third book in The Factory girl’s series. I am a huge fan of the first two books, and I could not wait to read the third instalment and I was as far from disappointed as I could get. Again, this book is set during world war two, with the story taking place in a small mining village in northern England. What I enjoy about this series is how the fictional characters all pull together to help one another despite every hurdle  thrown their way – a hurdle they overcome, together. Yes, the book is fictional, but I like to think that that was how most people would have behaved.

After reading this I stopped and reflected and we can try to struggle on by ourselves or we can ask for help, there is no shame in it, quite the opposite in fact, it shows great courage and determination to ask for help, We can only get through this together.

If like me you are a fan of historical fiction, and Margaret Graham,, Milly Adams and Annie Clarke (one and the same person)  then you must-read Wedding bells on the Home Front.

One of my most memorable reads of this year is In The End by Donna H Duhig.

In 1919, a sudden tragedy tears Betsy’s family apart. Her childhood and life, and that of her siblings, will change irrevocably.    Betsy grows up in the years between the two wars. During this time of hardship, she faces many struggles and losses. Will she develop the strength and determination to find her own way in life? Will things work out In the EndI approached Donna on Instagram and asked if I could review her debut novel for the magazine. She very generously agreed to send me a copy. I was pre warned to have the tissues ready as it is a tear jerker, I am not one to cry easily, but I was bawling by the end of the first chapter. I am in absolute awe of Duhig’s incredible ability to draw you in as a reader and keep you hooked from the first sentence to the very last. I hope that 2021 brings us more books by this outstanding author.

If you are a fan of Downton Abbey and Historical fiction in general then you will love In The End.

I have read 4 Linda Finlay novels so far and each one has been incredible , The one that I read this year was The Seashell Girl.   Seventeen-year-old Merryn Dyer has been helping her mother to knit fisherman’s jumpers in a small Cornish village since she was a young girl. Growing up without a father, Merryn is used to barely scraping a living and her mother has always instilled pride and honesty in her. But she dreams of one day having more in life. So when she gets the chance at a job in a nearby city she jumps at it, despite her mother’s reservations. However, once out of her village she begins to uncover long-buried secrets about her past that threaten to unravel everything that she thought she knew.

I couldn’t put it down I simply had to know what was going to happen. Full of refreshing characters and plot twists that you do not see coming The Sea Shell Girl makes for a gripping and beautiful read. Set in the 1880’s in the beautiful west country Finlay captures the stunning scenery of a small Cornish village.  If you are after a book that will capture your heart and will keep you hooked until the very end then this is the book for you

 

 

Love and Comfort with the Baby Carrier Move.

Both of my children spent much of the first years of their lives in a BabyBjörn. I cannot recommend BabyBjörn enough. They are the Rolls-Royce of baby carriers. The Baby Carrier Move is the latest carrier and it has the same high-end engineering as its predecessors.  It is made from an airy 3D mesh fabric that I love, it also dries quickly after washing. 

The Baby Carrier Move is stylish and easy to get off and on, it is also easy to manoeuvre. Another reason I love baby carriers is because I find it easy to breastfeed in them. I put a light breastfeeding scarf over the carrier. You can even do it while you are walking. Freedom for mama. Frost loves. 

BabyBjörn is promoting love and comfort with the ergonomic Baby Carrier Move, a carrier designed for simplicity in the home or out and about, for use from day one, all the way to 15 months. The superior back support and an ergonomic waist belt makes the Baby Carrier Move super comfortable for parents, and as with all BabyBjorn Baby Carriers, little ones love being carried, being close to their parent’s heart as they grow and can explore the world together.
Baby Bjorn, baby sling, Babybjorn, baby carrier,

The baby carrier’s thin and flexible 3D mesh fabric ensures that a newborn baby is sitting in a perfect position and the size of the baby carrier can be adjusted as the baby grows. The soft fabric hugs the baby’s back, legs and hips, and provides good support. For the first five months, the baby is carried facing inwards and then parents have the option of carrying their baby facing outwards. The baby carrier is fully adjustable.

Thirty million babies have been carried in a BabyBjörn Baby Carrier since the very first one – Close to Heart – was launched in 1973. The company, which was founded in 1961, continually develops and simplifies its baby carriers to be able to offer parents babywearing equipment that suits their family. It’s important that a baby carrier adapts easily to the baby’s size and the family’s lifestyle.

 “We have tested Baby Carrier Move with a large number of test families in their home environments and on long walks over a long period in order to make sure that it’s comfortable for both parents and babies.” says BabyBjörn’s Josefin Kleremo, project manager for Baby Carrier Move.

Baby Carrier Move is acknowledged as hip-healthy by the International Hip Dysplasia Institute (IHDI). https://bit.ly/2IH41b1

BabyBjorn, baby carrier, review, BabyBjorn, reviews

The baby carrier is made of an airy 3D mesh fabric that breathes well and dries quickly after washing. The fabric has been specially developed for BabyBjörn’s baby carriers and meets the requirements of OEKO-TEX 100 Class 1 for safe textiles for babies and toddlers.

Baby Carrier Move is available from www.babybjorn.co.uk in the colours Light Grey, Navy, Anthracite and Sage green. Recommended Retail Price:  £119.99

 

5 Books That Changed Me: CJ Daugherty

 CJ Daugherty The Secret History, by Donna Tartt

This fast-paced but dreamy novel set at a private university in the New England mountains, starts with a murder and tells the story of how it happened in reverse, as a group of elegant young friends obsessed with Greek mythology take everything too far, and close friendships fall to pieces. In her most restrained and elegant book, Tartt performs a magic trick by inventing fascinating characters who are capable of cold-blooded murder, and then making you like them. You know from the start they are killers, and yet you still want to be their friend. I re-read this book regularly.

The Likeness, by Tana French

This Irish crime novel by Tana French is one of my all-time favorite books. I’ve read it multiple times. It follows a female detective as she investigates a murder victim who looks exactly like her. Using their alikeness as a weapon, she takes over the dead woman’s life – moving in with her friends into a house in the countryside outside Dublin. She begins investigating them from within but then, slowly becomes seduced by them, and the rambling mansion where they live. Unfortunately, this is a very dangerous decision. Because one of them is a killer.

The Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern

This is an elegant, wandering, multi-strand tale of a mysterious circus that travels in secrecy and arrives without warning. Nobody knows when or where it will appear, or how long it will stay. The tents are filled with magical, mysterious displays. People are obsessed with it, and for good reason. It could be dangerous or simply wonderful — even after reading the book it’s hard to know which. Either way it doesn’t matter. It’s so beautifully written, I long to wake up one morning, as dawn washes the dark from the sky, to find the circus has appeared in my town. 

Station 11, by Emily St John Mandel

I bought this book after everyone I trust in the world told me it was amazing, and they were ALL right. It starts in a pandemic apocalypse (sound familiar?) and then jumps forward in time to follow a group of survivors who are exploring the remains of America in a roving band of Shakespearean actors, travelling from settlement to settlement performing plays for people who can barely remember a time before life was like this. It’s both scary and thoughtful, and ultimately filled with hope. Maybe just skim the first chapter while we’re all locked in our houses, but the rest will lift you.

Circe, by Madeline Miller

This feminist reinterpretation of The Odyssey told from the perspective of the banished witch, Circe, is the most beautiful, heartbreaking, glorious look at the Greek myths in all of time. Circe’s story is bittersweet. She’s young and voiceless, expected to be nothing but beautiful and compliant. Because she isn’t either of those things, she’s punished by being banished to an island to live completely alone. There, in isolation, she finds herself. The tale is told with wonderful compassion. It’s funny and dry, and terribly poignant in places. I cried 3 times listening to the audiobook. Honestly, it’s so gorgeously written I don’t know why I bother.

 

Number 10 by CJ Daugherty is out now, £9.99 from Moonflower Books available on Amazon here.

 

ONLINE PANTOMIME – oh yes it is – The Legend Of Moby Dick Whittington at www.thesleepingtrees.co.uk: review by Paul Vates

until 5th January 2021

Absolutely brilliant!”

Several years ago I travelled to the scariness that is south London (apologies if you live there!), to the tiny Theatre 503, to watch this company’s production of Scrooge and the Seven Dwarves. I was attacked by a T-Rex during the show. I laughed a lot. I joined in a lot and, finally, left the theatre on a high… still talking about it.

Times have changed. Live, intimate theatre seems so long ago. Companies and creatives have pummelled their audiences with virtual shows – productions that we watch through the screen. But how to keep the essence of ‘live’ even though we are, basically, watching a tv programme?

Simple – sit back and join John, James and Joshua of Sleeping Trees as they tell you a story… although you won’t be resting for long. You’ll throw paper at the screen, hide under a sheet, peer through toilet rolls, even row a boat with kitchen implements – all manner of madcap antics that turn a simple muck around with these three chaps into an ‘interactive’ 50-minute long show that will make children AND adults laugh out loud.

They play all the characters bar one (but no spoilers!) and pull us into their crazy world. It is hilarious fun. All shot in someone’s house – which means there could be neighbours with their ears to the walls saying, ‘They’re at it again! What IS going on in there?!?’ Unlike other offerings on the web this year, this production is imaginatively shot and edited by Shaun Reynolds and neatly directed by Kerry Frampton.

Sleeping Trees specialise in melding different stories together – creating a fusion that turns the whole experience into a ‘live cartoon’. Absolutely brilliant! As for the baddie of the piece…

This is King Rat… BOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!

Photography Shaun Reynolds

Producers Alice Carter & Sleeping Trees – with support from Battersea Arts Centre

Writers John Woodburn, James Dunnell-Smith, Joshua George Smith and Ben Hales

Director Kerry Frampton

Music Ben Hales

Running Time 50 minutes approx

Tickets https://sleepingtrees.ticketco.events/uk/en/e/the_legend_of_moby_dick_whittington

Shows until 5th January 2021 – go to www.thesleepingtrees.co.uk for details

Price From £5

Twitter @WeSleepingTrees

My Writing Process Leith MacArthur

Leith MacArthur, author, writerMy Writing Routine:

I write every day for 2-4 hours, from roughly 8am to 11am, depending on how open my creative flow remains. I consider the “flow” to be a kind of pathway or conduit to the Infinite, where all events, thoughts, problems, solutions, lives and deaths occur, whether past, present, or future.

A Bit About Me:

I began writing when I was about ten years old. Short stories, poems, and a children’s book about a germ who saves the world. When I was introduced to alcohol and drugs at the age of fourteen, I became instantly addicted and my internal writer went into a coma. I wrote not another word until my mid-thirties when a novel burst out of me. I continued to write novels, but everything I expressed, whether it was through writing or raging, was being forced through a translation device, fueled and energized by drugs and booze. I drank, drugged and wrote for a total of forty-seven years. When, at the age of 66, I finally got clean, my writing began to take on a life of its own: it began to mature in the process. In essence, the act of writing became “natural” and, for the first time in my life, I realized I had been born with the gift of expression. My recently released novel, The Death of Harry Crow, is my best work. I’m now hard at work on the sequel, and the writing continues to flow with ease and assurance. 

What I Have Written, Past and Present:

Various poems and short stories; a children’s book called, Gerry the Germ; a supernatural thriller called, The Duplicating Man;  a book specifically for women called How To Buy An Excellent Used Car; a biographical novel (part memoir) about my life called, An Artificial Life;  five novels in The William Snow Series, Beneath the Bridge, The Stones of Mirabella, The Barnes and Blackwell Affair, The Finding Man, and (the only one published from the series) The Death of Harry Crow. I am currently at work putting the finishing touches on the sequel to Harry Crow, called The Man in the Moon. It’s good stuff.

What I Am Promoting Now:

The Death of Harry Crow

A bit about the process of writing:

I write directly from my thoughts. No plan. If I don’t happen to have any interesting thoughts that are worthy of words, I put down words anyway. Random words. Misspelled words. Incomplete sentences. It doesn’t matter. Eventually, something readable comes out.

How Do I Do My Structure:

These days I write only novels. I have no plan and I use no outline. Because I write straight out of the Infinite, I have no real structure; I just write until the work announces to me that it’s done. However, because I write thrillers, I do prefer to write short, impactful chapters that keep the action going, a bit like a Gatling gun.

What Do I Find Hard About Writing:

The toughest thing for me is dealing with Creep, the ungrateful primate who lives in a cave at the back of my skull. When Creep comes lumbering out of his cave with his knuckles dragging along my brain pan, he has but one purpose: to keep me from becoming a self-supporting writer. Creep came close to killing me (his true objective) by convincing me, across a span of 47 years, that drugs were the only way to deal with pain. Creep almost won, but when I learned that expressing pain is the only way to heal it, he lost most of his power over me. He’s still there, but I know how to deal with him now: I write.

What Do I Love About Writing:

I love that I can leave. When I write, I leave the world behind me: it’s only me, the words, and the fantasy in my head. I have unlimited power. I can do anything.

Advice For Other Writers:

Do these three things: read, read, and read. If you are meant to write, the words will follow.

The Death of Harry Crow by Leith MacArthur available in paperback, £9.99, via Amazon or to order in any good bookshop.