How I Got Published Jenny O’Brien

There are many roads to publication. But as a forty-year-old with three kids of three and under, including twins and a busy job as a nurse, none of them were for me – or so I thought. Then a character popped into my mind. An earworm that wouldn’t go away. A little boy called Dai Monday. It took me a year to find the courage to pick up a pen. With no time to write at home and a busy day job, I took to carrying a notebook around in my scrub top. This notebook got filled during my 15 minute coffee breaks. Within 6 weeks I had a very poor, first draft of my first book.

Jenny O'Brien , author, writer, how I got published ,

Fast forward five years. I was still writing but with no thought of publishing until peer pressure and a bullying incident at school led me to self-publish Boy Brainy. Six more years quickly followed in tandem with a box full of rejection letters. I’m not sure how many rejections—too many to count but not so many as to blunt my determination to succeed.

It took twelve years to find a home for my writing. Twelve years when my writing improved, but also the quality of my query letters. Never underestimate the importance of a well-crafted query letter!

But, in the end, the years didn’t count for much. It was a few quirks of fate that pushed me over the finishing line. A change in genre from children’s books to romance and finally crime fiction. BookBub accepting me for a book promotion the first time I applied. One last push to secure a publisher and, finally, engineering the date of the BookBub promotion to coincide with my query letter arriving at HQ Digital, an imprint of Harper Collins.

I said at the start that there are many roads to publication. While I wouldn’t recommend mine to anyone, there are lessons to be learnt. If you are struggling to find the time to write, change how you view time. Chunk it into 15-minute sessions instead of hours. Those few minutes add up. It might mean writing in transit but that’s easily catered for with a notebook or even a mobile phone. To rephrase a well-known saying. There is always a way, but first you must find the will. My BookBub deal was a fluke, but what followed wasn’t. There’s nothing wrong with nudging luck along with a little gentle manoeuvring.

Good luck!

Jenny O’Brien is an Irish writer of the Detective Gaby Darin series published by HQ Digital.

Keep You Safe By Melissa Hill Book Review

Keep You Safe Melissa Hill

When I first took this book out of its envelope I was not sure I wanted to read it. As a mother I was worried it would play on my fears. But you should never judge a book by its cover and I jumped in. To say that I loved the book would be an understatement. It really pulls you in and does not let go. It is not just that it is well written, it also carries the story along so well, and is so believable. The characters are well rounded and relatable, even if sometimes they do something you think is idiotic. This book takes an issue that rumbles on in society: the MMR vaccination and its link to autism, and the consequences to people not vaccinating their children, and then tells the story in a riveting way. It also has a mummy blogger in it, which makes the book even more relevant. Modern and entertaining: you will be gripped until the very last page. A stunning book.

 

A mother always knows best. Doesn’t she?

What if your choice for your child could harm someone else’s?

Every mother faces impossible choices. Vaccination is one of the hardest. For single mum Kate O’Hara, there was no decision to make. Her daughter Rosie is one of a small percentage of Irish children who can’t be vaccinated against measles. All Kate can do is hope that her little girl is safe.

For mummy blogger Madeleine Cooper, it was a leap of faith she wasn’t prepared to take when she and her husband declined controversial measles jabs for their daughter Clara. All she can do is pray that it’s the right decision.

But when classmates Clara and Rosie both become sick will Kate pay for Madeleine’s choice?

A stunning and addictive new book club read from beloved bestselling Irish author Melissa Hill that explores every mother’s worst fear

 

Luxury Irish Chocolatier Lily O’Brien’s Christmas Range Review

Luxury Irish Chocolatier Lily O'Brien's Review | Christmas Reviewcreamy salted caramel sharing pouch flob8081torc-christmas-caramels flob8300r lob 16 choc ultimate collection redWe reviewed some amazing chocolate from Lily O’Brien’s. The Milk Chocolate Truffles were utterly divine and so chocolatey we were in heaven. The Creamy Caramels were delicious and perfect, the Creamy Caramels with Sea Salt are unique, with a perfect dash of sea salt that really works. The Ultimate Chocolate Collection already looked like a present and was exciting to unwrap, but not as exciting as what was inside: an amazing collection of chocolates that were the encapsulation of luxury. We can’t think of a better present for a loved one. Give in bulk to those you love and remain popular for the rest of the year.

Spread some luxurious festive cheer with the brand new Christmas collection from Lily O’Brien’s – the premium Irish chocolatier.

With deliciously decadent chocolates that create that “wow” factor for dinner party guests, and gorgeous gifting solutions for that special someone, there’s a Lily O’Brien’s product for every Christmas occasion.

Lily O’Brien’s chocolates are crafted with care and passion, to ensure that each and every chocolate is of the finest quality.

Especially for the festive season, Lily O’Brien’s has created some extra special gifts in stunning seasonal packaging. Customers will love the Petit Indulgence Keepsake Star – a beautiful selection of milk, dark and white classic Lily O’Brien’s favourites, presented in a star-shaped keepsake box.chocolate orange chocs flob5601 creamy caramels tree

Dinner party hosts can add a touch of seasonal sparkle to the table with Lily O’Brien’s Milk Chocolate Truffle Cracker. A fabulous cracker-shaped box crammed full of luxurious milk chocolate truffles.

And, the Ultimate Chocolate Collection has been given a fantastic festive twist, with several gifting sizes available in Christmas packaging. This scrumptiously amazing assortment contains eight unique Lily O’Brien’s recipes including Le Crunch Chocolat, Lemon Meringue Pie, Zesty Orange Chocolate, Sticky Toffee, Praline Perfection, Double Chocolate Truffle, Simply Chocolate and Great Taste Award winner Death by Chocolate.

Lily O’Brien’s chocolates are available in major supermarkets including Waitrose.com, Asda.com, Sainsbury’s, Morrisons and online at www.lilyobriens.com. The Christmas range will be available to purchase from the end of Autumn.

 

Lily O’Brien’s Christmas Collection:

Lily O’Brien’s Petit Indulgence Keepsake Star 96g
Lily O’Brien’s Creamy Caramels Christmas Gift Pouch 110g Lily O’Brien’s Milk Chocolate Truffles Christmas Cracker 195g Lily O’Brien’s Chocolate Indulgence Collection 250g Lily O’Brien’s Chocolate Treasures Collection 240g
Lily O’Brien’s Ultimate Chocolate Collection 190g
Lily O’Brien’s Ultimate Chocolate Collection 160g

www.lilyobriens.com

 

 

Return Ticket To Ireland Please by Wendy Breckon

The year is 1968, September, in the gentle mist on the dark, dark, sea.  There I stand, age fifteen, on the top deck, watching the twinkling lights of Belfast harbour slowly vanishing.  With an Ulster accent, a case crammed full of Irish potato bread and some ‘cracking’ memories, I am on my way to England’s green and pleasant land.

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My return visits over the years have been frequent and much documented.  Lingering walks by Loch Neigh, and gazing upon the beautiful Mourne Mountains.  Ambling through Carlingford in search of the perfect Irish coffee.  Following the haunting sound of the fiddle and an Irish voice or two to the nearest pub.

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There is one place though that is more than magical.  The small village of my roots,  Scarva, (Scarbhach in Irish), in County Down.  It is placed on the map beside County Armagh and marked by the Newry canal.

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Visitors come by bike or foot, or the humble motor car, to relax by the water, to take refreshments or maybe like me, to people watch with a notebook not too far away.  It’s a delightful way to spend a day.

My grandparents lived in a cottage with a small holding up a nearby lane.  They grappled with mucky pigs, squawking hens, belligerent cows and needy sheep.  Paradise!. Eventually they moved down to the village in the main street minus the livestock and the early hours.  Here their new window on the world gave me many opportunities for writing a story or two., but I missed the early sound of the cockerel and the clanking of the milk churns. though I’m sure they didn’t.

In search of nostalgia, I recently revisited the now tumbled down and derelict Drumilla Cottage where the seeds of my writing first appeared.  There it was … a crumbling reminder of a childhood spent amongst the fields and lanes of the delightful County Down.

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We decided to take the winding road to Portadown, eight miles from Scarva in County Armagh.  This used to be a small market town in the fifties and sixties, where I attended secondary school, Portadown College, until the age of fifteen.

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One of the defining moments for me will always be the morning that Mary Peters (our ex Head Girl) hid behind the curtain on the school stage.  Curious?  So were we young first years.  She had recently won a medal for Great Britain and Northern Ireland in the Pentathlon, so how on earth did she have the time to be here?

“Well, I’m sure you have no idea who is behind the curtain children?”  Said our headmaster, mischievously.

“Could it be Jesus Christ sir?” said a brave lad in the front row.

Mary appeared with her warm, friendly grin clutching her medal. Everyone cheered.

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“Go for what you want in life.  Aim high.  Never give up” she told us with great passion.  We all nodded like a hundred puppy dogs in the back of a vintage camper van.

Later that morning, Mary visited my cookery class to judge a pastry rolling competition.

“Now then class, who can roll the longest piece of pastry for our local champion and there’s a prize …”.

I was off… the class were completely mesmerised.  The long, thin, discoloured snake of pastry touched the ground, sweeping up the fluff at the bottom.

“And the shilling goes to Wendy, it’s a  really good effort.  Well done”.

“But it’s a wee bit dirty miss,” said one girl in a disgruntled manner.

“Colour doesn’t matter dear.  It’s all about the attitude”, said the teacher passing me the shilling.

Mary Peters kissed me on the cheek and I got to hold the shiny medal.

As the car ambles through the winding roads on the way back to the ferry, there was much laughter as I recall this and other moments, to him beside me.  We both agree, not just because I was born there, that Ireland is magical, mystical and magnificent.  If you haven’t been before why not cross over the Irish Sea this year.  Drive to the North or to the South for a short while or even longer.  Just say, “RETURN TICKET TO IRELAND PLEASE”.

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Editor Catherine Balavage’s Radio Interview With Orla Barry

Frost editor Catherine Balavage was interviewed on The Green Room with Orla Barry. Catherine was talking about her new book How To Be a Successful Actor: Becoming an Actorpreneur. The interview is below and has lots of great acting advice. Have a listen and let us know what you think.

 

 

Are you an actor? If you have any acting questions then comment below and Catherine will answer them.

 

How To Be a Successful Actor: Becoming an Actorpreneur is out now and available here.

 

 

Father’s Day Gift Guide

Haven’t got your dad anything for Father’s Day yet? Fear not, we have some excellent suggestions. It’s on the 15th of June so read on and hurry up!

wildgeesewhiskey

The Wild Geese whiskey collection comprises four different variations to suit the whiskey novice or discerning Dad.
Classic Blend Irish Whiskey (£19.50) is a great entry-level whiskey and ideal for whipping up a Father’s Day cocktail such as an Old Fashioned or Amaretto Sour. Rare Irish Whiskey (£34) and The Single Malt Irish Whiskey (£54) can be enjoyed straight up or on the rocks and the Limited Edition Irish Whiskey (RRP £44, 70cl). We reviewed this whiskey (hard job but someone has to do it) and can confirm it is amazing, top-quality stuff. If your father has been especially good this year, get him some of this.

gameofthronesdragon

Game of Thrones Dragon figures £40

A must-have for supporters of the House of Targaryen, choose from baby Drogon, Viserion or Rhaegal, or collect all three! Each dragon figure is amazingly crafted and finely handpainted, standing at 11.5cm high. 

Dragon –  Baby dragon, Drogon tail raised, lifts his wings about to take flight 

Viserion – Viserion reaches his head to the sky

Rhaegal –  Craning his neck in interest and featuring a curly tail, this baby Rhaegal is both cute and menacing at the same time!

 

From www.hboshopeu.com and Tresor Paris

 

belugavodkareviewBeluga Noble Russian Vodka is a particularly good Russian vodka. We tried it, we liked it. Available here.

 

footballpuzzlewasgijThis Wasgij Original Puzzle combines games and sport. Perfect for dads. It also includes a free Wasgij football wall chart.

Wasgij Original 21: Football Fever! offers two 1000-piece football themed puzzles in a single box, sure to bring Dad hours of entertainment in preparation for England’s kick off this summer in Brazil.

In addition to piecing together the image on the box of a family cheering on their beloved national team, the second puzzle follows the Wasgij Original concept of piecing together what the characters in the box image are looking at.

A FREE football wall chart is also included so you can track the progress of all the teams participating in this summer’s international football tournament.

toneteeThis is a revolutionary body toning fit-wear specifically designed for men who want to look slimmer. This Tone Tee is comfortable and gives all-round compression. It works on paunches and moobs. Women have spanx and now men have Tone Tee. It has 360 degree tone technology and has built-in temperature control breath-in technology. Our male writers who have, erm, overindulged recently loved it. From tonetee.com

triventowineTrivento Malbec Reserve for wine-loving dads. We reviewed this and it is a very good red wine. Plum and rasberry flavours combine elegantly with vanilla notes from the oak. Well balanced exhibiting sweet tannins and a velvety finish.

 

steamingtovictorybookreview

Steaming to Victory: How Britain’s Railways Won the War is a brilliant book about how Britain’s Railways won the war. Excellent for dads who love trains or history.

 

pocketsquareAmazon Fashion Men’s Oxford Circus Handkerchief These pocket squares are perfect for fashionable dads. They come in a range of different London landmarks. Cool and unique.

conversebags
Converse Accessories have launched a collection of bags inspired by the football World Cup. The Prem Sport range is available in a selection of colourways that support footballs’ most iconic international teams ahead of the World Cup finals in Brazil next month. With a retro styled Converse logo emblazoned across the bag, the range celebrates some of the world’s top national teams including England with a bold red and white colour combination as well as colourways for rivals Germany, France and of course the green, yellow and blue of host nation, Brazil.

Stockists for this collection include Next, ASOS, and USC. Perfect for sporty dads and those who love Converse.

 

fossilwatch
Fossil Men’s Aeroflite Watch

A really beautiful watch. Perfect for the main man in your life.

Stockist:  www.WatchShop.com

 

 

What will you get your dad?

 

 

Collider Hits Cinemas This Friday

Sci-Fi fans rejoice: Collider an Irish production from beActive Entertainment, that started as a Comic Book and multiplatform project, and will now be released as a Feature Film in Irish cinemas next Friday, January 10th.

collider movie

Collider was inspired by experiments performed at the CERN campus in Geneva, where scientists found the Higgs Boson and won the Nobel Prize in physics 2013. With the theme of “What would you do if you could go back in time?” COLLIDER’s action takes place in 2018. The planet has just collapsed and the human species will be wiped out due to a succession of natural disasters and the emergence a mutant race called the Unknown. In the movie, Peter, Alisha, Carlos, Fiona, Luke and Lucy must join forces to reactivate the Collider, to go back in time and prevent the apocalypse. This will not be an easy journey: in less than 24 hours, the time portal will close forever.

Directed by Irish helmer Jason Butler (Republic of Telly, The Rubberbandits) and produced by Nuno Bernardo (we have an exclusive interview with him here, done before production started), Triona Campbell and John McDonnell, COLLIDER features actors Iain Robertson (Basic Instinct 2, Plunkett & Macleane, The Contractor, Band of Brothers) and Lucy Cudden (Pulp, Judas Ghost Afterlife) in the lead roles. It was written by two-time EMMY nominee Nuno Bernardo (“Final Punishment” and “Beat Girl”).

Collider will be released in Ireland this January 10th, followed by a release in the UK, USA and Japan.

A New Way to Celebrate Irish Culture: Most Inspired Irish Audiobooks for St Patricks Day

  1. Fairy Tales of Oscar Wilde – Written by Oscar Wilde – Narrated by Judi Dench, Jeremy Irons, Derek Jacobi, Sinead Cusak, Joanna Lumley, Samantha Bond, Robert Harris, Geoffrey Palmer, Donald Sinden, Elaine Stritch

Here is a collection of the Oscar Wilde’s famous fairy tales, read by a cast of leading British actors.

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  1. Ulysses – Written by James Joyce – Narrated by Jim Norton

Ulysses is regarded by many as the single most important novel of the 20th century. It tells the story of one day in Dublin, June 16th 1904, largely through the eyes of Stephen Dedalus (Joyce’s alter ego from Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man) and Leopold Bloom, an advertising salesman. Both begin a normal day, and both set off on a journey around the streets of Dublin, which eventually brings them into contact with one another.

 

  1. Let the Great World Spin – Written by Colum McCann – Narrated by anon

It is August, 1974, and a tightrope walker is suspended between the twin towers, watched by thousands in the streets below. Elegantly weaving together their seemingly disparate lives, McCann’s powerful novel comes alive in the unforgettable voices of the city’s people, unexpectedly drawn together by hope, beauty, and the tightrope walker’s “artistic crime of the century.” Featuring a stunning ensemble performance by the narrators.

 

  1. Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha – Written by Roddy Doyle – Narrated by Aidan Gillen

Paddy Clarke is ten years old. Paddy Clarke lights fires. Paddy Clarke’s name is written in wet cement all over Barrytown, north Dublin. Paddy Clarke’s heroes are Father Damien (and the lepers), Geronimo and George Best. Paddy Clarke has a brother called Francis, but Paddy calls him Sinbad and hates him because that’s the rule. Paddy Clarke knows the exact moment to knock a dead scab from his knee. Paddy Clarke loves his Ma and Da, but it seems like they don’t love each other, and Paddy’s world is falling apart.

 

  1. Round Ireland with a Fridge – Written by Tony Hawks – Narrated by Tony Hawks

Whilst in Ireland for an International Song Competition, Tony Hawks was amazed to see a hitch-hiker, trying to thumb a lift, but with a fridge. This seemed amazingly optimistic – his Irish friends, however thought nothing of it at all. ‘I had clearly arrived in a country’, writes Tony, ‘where the qualifications for ‘eccentric’ involved a great deal more than that to which I had become used’. Two years pass but the fridge incident haunts our author. Until one night, heavy with drink, he finds himself arguing about Ireland with a friend. It is, he insists, a ‘magical place’, so magical in fact, that a man could even get a lift with a fridge. The next morning there is a note by the bed. ‘I hereby bet Tony Hawks the sum of One Hundred Pounds that he cannot hitch-hike around the circumference of Ireland with a fridge within one calendar month’. The document was signed. The bet was made. This book is the story of Tony’s adventures through that incredible month. The people he meets, the difficulties, the triumphs. The fridge.

 

  1. Irish History for Dummies – Written by Mike Cronin – Narrated by Patrick Moy

Putting history into a perspective, Irish History for Dummies is an engaging, entertaining and educational trip through time, packing in equal parts fun and facts, providing listeners with a riveting history of this ancient land. The history of Ireland has shaped the world far beyond its borders. And few stories have a greater need for a balanced and light-hearted telling than the complex and often controversial saga of Ireland and her people.

  1. W. B. Yeats: Selected Poems – Written by W. B. Yeats – Narrated by Donald Sutherland

William Butler Yeats, the first Irishman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature, is not only one of the greatest poets of the 20th century but one of the most widely read. The landscape, myths, legends, and folklore of his homeland lie at the heart of his poetic imagination, and the unique musicality of Ireland adds to the richness of his verse. But the themes of his poetry are universal and timeless: the conflict between life and death, love and hate, and the meaning of man’s existence in an imperfect world.

beckett

  1. Waiting for Godot – Written by Samuel Beckett – Narrated by Sean Barrett, David Burke, Terence Rigby, Nigel Anthony

There is now no doubt that not only is Waiting for Godot the outstanding play of the 20th century, but it is also Samuel Beckett’s masterpiece. Yet it is both a popular text to be studied at school and an enigma. The scene is a country road. There is a solitary tree. It is evening. Two tramp-like figures, Vladimir and Estragon, exchange words. Pull off boots. Munch a root vegetable. Two other curious characters enter. And a boy. Time passes. It is all strange yet familiar. Waiting for Godot casts its spell as powerfully in this audiobook recording as it does on stage.

  1. How the Irish Saved Civilization – Written by Thomas Cahill – Narrated by Liam Neeson

From the fall of Rome to the rise of Charlemagne – the “dark ages” – learning, scholarship, and culture disappeared from the European continent. The great heritage of Western civilization – from the Greek and Roman classics to Jewish and Christian works – would have been utterly lost were it not for the holy men and women of unconquered Ireland.

 

  1. The Irish Americans: A History – Written by Jay P. Dolan – Narrated by Jim McCabe

Jay Dolan of Notre Dame University is one of America’s most acclaimed scholars of immigration and ethnic history. In The Irish Americans, he caps his decades of writing and teaching with this magisterial history of the Irish experience in the United States. Although more than 30 million Americans claim Irish ancestry, no other general account of Irish American history has been published since the 1960s. Dolan draws on his own original research and much other recent scholarship to weave an insightful, colorful narrative. He follows the Irish from their first arrival in the American colonies through the bleak days of the potato famine that brought millions of starving immigrants; the trials of ethnic prejudice and “No Irish Need Apply”, the rise of Irish political power and the heyday of Tammany politics; to the election of John F. Kennedy as president, a moment of triumph when an Irish American ascended to the highest office in the land.