Best Endeavours Endeavouring To Surprise: Jane Cable on what happens once that publishing deal is in the bag

best-endeavours-endeavouring-to-surprise-jane-cable-on-what-happens-once-that-digital-publishing-deal-is-in-the-bag-continuesanotheryouBEST ENDEAVOURS

Jane Cable’s blog about what happens once that digital publishing deal is in the bag continues.

ENDEAVOURING TO SURPRISE

I was just about to sit down to write this – and to tell you all about my marketing plans for the new year – when I was distracted by my inbox. Hard to ignore an email from my publisher Endeavour Press though. Hard, and probably not a wise choice.

This one was short and to the point: ‘Please find attached the cover that we have designed for Another You – I do hope you like it. Many thanks for returning the manuscript as well, all going well we are hoping to publish it at some point this week.’ Argh… and ARGH!

Seeing the cover for the first time was always going to be one of those make or break moments and I fingered the ‘download attachment’ button nervously. But I could see a thin slice of the title in the preview pane and the vibrant red script drew me in.

First impressions? I loved it. And first impressions are the most important on a crowded page of thumbnails on Amazon. ‘Open me! Read me!’ it screamed. “The past is never dead…” it told me – and instantly I wanted to know why. Well, I would have if I didn’t already, but you get my drift.

The cover works on so many levels. The GIs in sepia in the past, the modern woman with a touch of colour in the present. The sea, the colours, linking them both. Boy oh boy, am I one happy writer.

There is one proviso though, but I am undecided about whether it’s important. Marie would never wear a skirt that short and while she’d love the hat, she probably couldn’t afford it. When she isn’t in her chef’s whites she almost invariably shoves on a pair of jeans – or if she has to dress to impress, a pair of tailored trousers. Now if you’re the sort of reader who likes to imagine their own characters you won’t care a jot, but if you like to refer to the cover to see what they look like then it could be just a little bit irritating… although overall I suspect I am splitting hairs.

More important is the strap line. There were a few different ones flying around. In the original blurb it was ‘What happens when you reach out and touch the past?’ which I replaced with ‘When the present is unbearable, can you be saved by the past?’ (Amazon loves a question). But the line on the cover is snappy and succinct. Job done.

And it’s just as well one job is, because if the book is going to come out this week then I’m way, way behind. My website updates may have gone to the designer, but they’re still in her in tray; my blog tour is only just beginning to come together; Lisa my PR sent me a draft press release a few weeks ago but I haven’t even had time to open it. And this week is pretty well fully booked… even if I believed that just a fraction before Christmas was a good time to promote a summer read.

A new marketing strategy beckons. Sshh – don’t tell anyone it’s out there. Yet.

 

Jane Cable is the author of two independently published romantic suspense novels, The Cheesemaker’s House and The Faerie Tree, and a sporadic contributor to Frost. Another You tells the tale of how two young American soldiers born sixty years apart help forty-something Marie Johnson to rebuild her shattered confidence and find new love. Discover more at www.janecable.com.

 

 

MySign by Revolution New Make-up Inspired by Your Star Sign

mysignleomakeupAstrology is huge. In fact, I would guess it is a billion pound industry. I am a Leo and a lot of the Leo characteristics apply to me. I am sociable, outgoing and ambitious. I may also be introverted sometimes, but I generally do feel like a Leo. I don’t read my horoscope but I do believe there is something in it.

I got sent this gorgeous make-up from MySign by Revolution New. I have to say, it is very ‘me’. The colours are perfect and are what I would choose. The Compact Eye Wheel is a genius idea. It costs only £5 and includes an eye primer, highlighter, 2 shades of brow powder and 3 eye shadow shades, chosen especially for your sign to blend and customise your look.

For centuries,  psychics have been consulted by those seeking answers from the unseen realms. The Tarot has been credited for providing illuminating solutions for all their major dilemmas, and even guiding people so they avoid future misfortunes. Many still take the help of psychic reading to find the right path.

Inside every box is your own star sign’s 2017 forecast for the year ahead written by professional astrologer, Julia

Fisher. This is the first beauty range with an astrology theme. It takes the characteristics about your star sign along with the colours of your star sign, creating the ultimate in personalisation. The lip gloss is great too and it is a beautiful dark colour. The lip gloss is £3 and it is such a wearable nude.

MySign is the latest project from notable entrepreneur and one-to-watch Krista Madden.  I am definitely a fan.

Website www.mysigncollection.com

 

Share your star sign and make-up looks with us using #MYSIGN

Instagram @mysigncollection Twitter @mysignmakeup YouTube MYSIGN

Available to buy in selected Superdrug Stores www.superdrug.com & www.TAMBeauty.com

The MYSIGN collaboration with Makeup Revolution products for eyes and lips, offer amazing pigments both shimmery and matt that perform perfectly; use them to blend, line and define the eyes or wear as a pop of statement colour.

 

Beef and Vegetable Pasties

It’s cold outside and you probably want something hearty to eat, worry no more I have the perfect recipe for the weekend before you indulge in all that rich Christmas food, from a few years back from when I lived and worked in Cornwall. On a journey through the southwest when you leave cuddly, cosy Devon and its world famous cream teas, scones piled high with clotted cream and jam*, you cross the Tamar river and enter another world. There is something different about Cornwall and it always has been so, it is a magical place, a mythical place, slightly out of step and even out of time with the rest of England. It is a land with a rich history, it was a stronghold of the Celtic resistance to the Roman invasion, Phoenician traders travelled across the seas, over five hundred years ago, to bargain for the tin mined from its stony ground. It is a land of rolling, bleak moors, secret coves and bays hiding smugglers and pirates. Tintagel Castle, birthplace of the once and future King Arthur clings to its rugged coast. Cornwall is the land of the pasty.

pasty-4While I lived in Cornwall I made more than a few pasties culminating in a Bank Holiday weekend festival of pasties, real ale, music and more than a little mayhem at the New Inn, Tresco. People watched live bands, drank numerous pints of real ale and scrumpy in the Beer Festival Pavilion and ate pasties, ate pasties and ate more pasties. In fact, I’m pretty sure it could be a world record we sold thousands of pasties from producers all over Cornwall with some very unusual fillings. Peaches and Cream, Lamb Biryani, the Full English Breakfast Pasty ( grandma would approve ** ) to name just a few. I developed quite an aversion to the pasty but now I am slowly recovering.

So before I upset every Cornish man, woman and child with my totally unauthentic recipe I really ought to mention how it should be made. One of the first references to a meat pasty was made by the thirteenth-century chronicler Matthew Paris ( not the modern Times columnist although I’m sure he could make a mean pasty should he wish ) writing about the diet of the monks of St. Albans. The pasty often filled with venison was a delicacy and is mentioned by Jane Seymour, wife of King Henry VIII and the diarist Samuel Pepys.

As the popularity of the pasty waned nationally the Cornish pasty came into its own. The pasty was a popular filling dish to carry into the deep pits of the Cornish tin mines in the seventh and eighteenth century, wrap in thick pastry and muslin cloth the filling would keep warm for several hours. The pasty was often divided with meat the potato then fruit fillings. The thick twist of pastry was to allow the miners with dirty hands a convenient way to hold the pasty and was then discarded. There may be some truth that this also prevented contamination with the poisonous arsenic present in the tin mines.

A proper pasty is considered to contain beef, sliced potato, onion, and swede. Confusingly in Cornwall, a swede is called a turnip. I am not sure what they call Norwegians. The ingredients are sealed in the pastry with plenty of black pepper and cooked from raw. The Cornish pasty is protected under European law alongside Champagne and Parmesan cheese so the Cornish are right to be proud of their culinary heritage. Here is my recipe for the unauthentic but still quite tasty pasty. If you are Cornish I apologise.

 

*Always in Devon cream first and jam on top, in Cornwall the jam goes on the scone, it’s best not to ask wars are started over less.

** It is a little known fact all grandmothers don’t think you can get through the day without a hearty full English breakfast inside you. This is no bad thing

 

 

Beef and Vegetable Pasties makes 6 – 8

1 block of readymade Puff Pastry

Look I know we have not even got to the filling and I am using puff pastry and that is sacrilege, frozen puff pastry is a godsend to all but the most dedicated of cooks and always delivers a good finished result and they are very tasty I promise and I have apologised already.

 

500 gr Chuck Steak, cut in small chunks ( ask your butcher if you’re a bit unsure )

1 large White Onion, peeled and sliced

1 medium Swede, peeled and sliced about  ½ cm thick

4 Carrots, peeled and sliced

2 large Baking Potatoes, washed, peeled and sliced twice as thick as the swede

50 gr Button Mushrooms, wiped and thinly sliced ( optional )

A knob of butter

A glug of quality Olive Oil

30 gr Plain Flour

300 ml good Beef Stock

Worcestershire sauce

Sea Salt and freshly ground Black Pepper

 

Flour for dusting

Egg wash

 

Preheat the oven to 200C / 400F / Gas 6. In a large heavy-bottomed pan heat the oil and butter over a medium heat and add the onion and sauté for five minutes. Seal the meat, flour and plenty of black pepper into a plastic bag and shake well. When the meat is coated add to the pan. Stir and add the carrots, swede, mushrooms and stock. Bring to the boil and simmer for ten minutes stirring occasionally. Add the swede and a good slug of Worcestershire sauce. Cook for a further fifteen minutes until the potatoes are just soft. Check seasoning and set aside to cool.

Flour a clean work surface and roll out pastry to between a quarter and one-eighth of an inch thick. Using a plate cut out circles around six to seven inches in diameter. With a soft pastry brush egg wash one side of the circle. Spoon on a generous amount of filling and pull over pastry.

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Crimp together the edges between finger and thumb to seal the pasty and place on a baking tray covered in parchment or with a silicon mat. Continue until all of the filling is used up.

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Chill in the refrigerator for twenty minutes to relax the pastry then brush twice with the egg wash. Prick once with the tip of a sharp knife to let out the steam and place in oven. Bake for twenty minutes until golden brown and serve.

Limited Edition Luxury Copies of The Original Jane Eyre Manuscript

janeeyremauscript janeeyremanuscript janeyeremanuscriptbronte charlottebrontejaneeyreoriginalmanuscript

Anyone who has read Frost will know that we love books. Many of us are also writers not just of the articles on this magazine, but of books. And what could be more exciting for a book-loving writer than their own copy of the final Jane Eyre manuscript? Taken directly from the only ‘fair copy’ in existence held in the British Library, this written manuscript is stunning. It also  includes important final revisions, allowing readers to see Brontë’s creative process first-hand.  This is a wonderful gift for Christmas and beyond. Heart-stoppingly beautiful, unique and an important piece of history. It is the perfect “wow” present for Christmas. Frost loves.
Limited edition manuscript copies of Jane Eyre, one of the nation’s best-loved novels
 
Price: £249
 
 
Only 1,000 hand-numbered copies
 

For the first time, book-lovers will be able to own their own copy of the final Jane Eyre manuscript.

To celebrate the bicentenary of Charlotte Brontë’s death, Parisian publishers Éditions des Saints Pères are releasing 1,000 luxury editions of the novel’s ‘fair copy’ – the final handwritten manuscript which Brontë submitted to her publishers in 1847.

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The manuscript is presented in a deluxe slipcase and illustrated with beautiful etchings, making it the perfect Christmas gift for bibliophiles.

 

Gransthread

 

As Christmas approaches Jenny Falcon has written a poem which will echo every grandmother’s thoughts, and of course, any mothers.

 

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To ELOISE

By Jenny Falcon

 

Oh child of my child

I could never have known

The love that you’d bring to my soul

 

 

When a few hours old

You were placed in my arms

I responded to Nature’s loud call

 

 

Though tiny in size

Your effect was so strong

My heart began leaping with joy

 

 

When we’d only just met

I was hooked by your charm

Drawn in by a love unalloyed

 

 

Now only weeks old

I gaze at your face

So perfect, so vulnerable too

 

 

I hug and I kiss

Look into your eyes

Desperately yearn to protect tiny you

 

 

What will you be like

As you blossom and grow

And you’re tossed in the turmoil of living?

 

 

Oh child of my child

I’ll be there if you call

With love always ready for giving

 

Green & Black’s is giving a personal gift this Christmas

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green-blacks-is-giving-a-personal-gift-this-christmas

green-blacks-is-giving-a-personal-gift-this-christmas12016 has been an amazing year for Green & Black’s: the brand has celebrated its 25th anniversary, visited another 7 local towns reviving historic recipes with a chocolate twist, and even released the delicious Dark Sea Salt THIN bar.
This year for Christmas, Green & Black’s are giving a personal gift: a delicious bar of Green & Black’s tailored to the recipient. The Green & Black’s Personalised Bar allows you to avoid the chaos of Christmas shopping, but also give a loved one a bespoke version of their favourite chocolate bar.

Here at Green & Black’s we are excited to be gearing up for the festive season, at the end of what has been a truly special year for the brand. In our 25th year, we have released a new THIN bar, visited foodie hotspots all over the country and now want to celebrate Christmas with something truly bespoke for our customers.

This Christmas, Green & Black’s have made the gift of chocolate more personal with Green & Black’s Personalised Bars. The online personalisation service allows you to make a unique gift with the name of your loved one written across the top of the bar. So that you can really express your special Christmas message, there is also space to write on the back of the bar, meaning the bar can also double up as a Christmas card! With this unique service available for eight of the most popular Green & Black’s flavours, such as Sea Salt, Butterscotch or Ginger, this personalised touch is the perfect small gift for friends and family alike.

For those who want to give a slightly larger present to a true connoisseur of chocolate, the Green and Black’s Connoisseur Collection is another fantastic gift. Perfect for chocolate lovers of all tastes, The Connoisseur Collection is the ultimate chocolate gift to share with friends and family as it contains not only a refined selection of our favourite Green & Black’s chocolate bars, but also its own ‘Tasting Wheel’ and ‘cheat sheet’ for pairing different flavours with complementing Christmas tipples.

Brandt Maybury, Green & Black’s Taste Specialist commented: “After a wonderful year here at Green & Black’s, we are excited for Christmas to finally arrive! A time perfect for spending with family and friends, our Connoisseur Collection is a lovely shared experience whilst the Personalised Bar lets you show that little extra care for your loved ones. Enjoy pushing your taste boundaries, and giving a truly intimate gift to your nearest and dearest with Green and Black’s this Christmas!”

The Green & Black’s gifting range is available from stores nationwide, however for the personalised option, please visit our online store at www.greenandblacksdirect.com and have it delivered direct to your door.

Green & Black’s Personalised Bars: RRP £5.00 + delivery

Personalised covers can be bought to wrap Almond, Burnt Toffee, Butterscotch, Dark 70%, Ginger, Milk, Sea Salt and White. They are able to order online at: www.greenandblacksdirect.com

The Connoisseur Collection: RRP £17.99
The Connoisseur Collection is the perfect gift for any food and wine connoisseur. It contains a selection of our favourite chocolate bars presented alongside tasting notes outlining which dessert wine, port, sherry or spirit compliments each bar.

 

Frost is a fan.

Benighted by JB Priestley: review by Paul Vates

 

The Old Red Lion Theatre, London

 

“…moody lighting simply isn’t enough.”

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As soon as lightning flashes and thunder roars, the scene is set for a dark and stormy night chiller. The characters are thrown into a creepy house in darkest Wales for the night.

With a running time of 1hr20, this should be a tense and nervous time, but sadly, atmosphere is the major thing lacking in this production. Adapted by Duncan Gates from an early Priestley book, I feel the play is trying too hard to be a ghost story, a period pastiche and a tongue-in-cheek comedy. Each genre fights with the other and there is no clear winner.

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Tom Machell and Harrie Hayes in Benighted

 

The cast of six actors, although earnestly telling us the story, look as out of kilter as the incredible set, designed by Gregor Donnelly, which at times, along with the sound design, manages to upstage the thin, hole-filled story.

Priestley wrote many successful plays (An Inspector Calls, Time And The Conways, When We Are Married) and I do wonder if he would have tried to adapt this particular story for the stage. It is thick in character detail but thin on plot, with Gates struggling to keep the action moving along between the speeches.

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Matt Maltby and Jessica Bay in Benighted

 

There are moments when the play suddenly sparks to life, showing there is a promising production somewhere underneath the indecision. Should Stephen Whitson’s direction take the play into The 39 Steps territory? Perhaps not. Priestley is darker than that. And deeper, too.

The title implies a state of ignorance and darkness. Maybe the producers could be braver and actually take us deeper into that very darkness that Priestley writes about. The moody lighting simply isn’t enough.

Benighted runs at The Old Red Lion, 418 St Johns Street, London EC1V 4NJ

until Saturday 7th January 2017: Tuesday-Saturday at 7.30pm, with Saturday and Sunday matinees at 3pm.

www.oldredliontheatre.co.uk

Twitter: @BenightedPlay, @ORLTheatre

Book tickets on online or by calling: 0844 412 4307: £19.50 (£17.50 concessions).

WONDERBOO – ‘Yes please,’ say Scouty, Polly and Rosie

 

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Wonderboo, the creator of nutritionally-balanced and perfectly-styled canine meals, launched in the UK and is now available in Italy, Germany, France and Spain. Backed by global influencers, WONDERBOO is a Swedish-born brand that delivers premium food for your dog with a healthy dose of Scandinavian chic.

Apparently the reasons why you and your dog will love WONDERBOO is because it’s made from all natural ingredients that promote a healthy lifestyle, or is it just that it tastes yummy, which is the decision of our tasters?

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It does come in lovely boxes, as you can see, but ours were just concerned with us taking the lids off and getting to it. Which they did, with gusto. A bit like Oliver, there was very much ‘Please may I have some more’ in the air.

Each meal comes portion-packaged to ensure your dog doesn’t over-indulge, which is a good thing, because these three most certainly would. The stylish packaging doubles as an on-the-go feeding bowl, which for ease and convenience can be delivered straight to your front door from digital emporium WONDERBOO.com.

Furthering its fashion credentials, WONDERBOO has already produced a series of high-quality accessories, including leads and collars, and will continue to develop this area of 
their brand in forthcoming partnerships with celebrated designers. 
WONDERBOO’S ethos and design has attracted high-profile tastemakers including Cara Delevingne (her dog Leo can’t get enough), Brix Smith-Start, Ashley Hicks, Charlotte Simone, Hilary Alexander, Bella Freud, Yasmin Mills and Giancarlo Giammetti. 
Founder and CEO Magnus Rosengren: “Dog owners’ awareness of canine health has increased, and the same high demands we put on our own food is now placed on the food we feed our dogs. I want to help

dog owners give their dogs the best conditions for a long and healthy life while making it convenient”.

If mine are anything to go by, give it a shot. Lots of good healthy ingredients, lots of tail wagging.

Details: www.WONDERBOO.com