Posts Tagged Harry Whittaker

5 Questions About Writing With . . . Harry Whittaker

Harry Whittaker is an author and broadcaster. His first fiction title for adults, Atlas: The Story of Pa Salt, was an instant Sunday Times Number One Bestseller, and was nominated for Fiction Book of the Year at the British Book Awards. Rosie and the Friendship Angel, from the Guardian Angels series, was named as one of the best books for children in 2022 by The Times. He lives in North Yorkshire with his wife and twin daughters.

How do you discipline/motivate yourself to write and do you set daily targets?
I began writing picture books for children six years ago. Oh, that was a joy! I would spend entire mornings poring over the structure of sentences (in between brewing increasingly eccentric coffees, staring out into the garden and daydreaming). But now I’m a novelist, and things are grimmer. Then only way I can hit a first draft deadline is by locking myself away and forcing myself to write ten pages per day. Sometimes, that provides only three pages of usable manuscript. But every so often, when the stars are in the right place, eleventh, twelfth and even thirteenth pages have been known to appear.

What are the most important qualities required by a writer? Do you have them?
I think discipline is probably the most important quality, and I don’t I possess an ounce of it. I will actively seek out ways to leave my desk – be it to take the dog out, feed lunch to one of my twin daughters, or sneakily watch The Traitors on iPlayer. As an author, you’ve really got to love writing. By which I mean hate writing. By which I mean you’ve got to love to hate writing.
I imagine that forcing out a novel has some crossover with childbirth. It’s hideously difficult, but at the end you have a beautiful baby. Then you immediately forget the excruciating pain and vow to do it all over again in the coming years.

How do you market yourself and your books?
I just say ‘yes’ to anything any publisher asks of me. Once I’ve delivered the product, it’s out of my hands, really. I love talking to readers. I don’t think there’s been a single event or signing I haven’t enjoyed. The key to those is to authentically be oneself. (And for the love of God, not to take your work too seriously.)

Which writing resources have you found useful, e.g., books, courses, organisations, websites etc.?
My mother was the author Lucinda Riley, so she was my number one resource. But if you don’t have a global bestseller on the end of the phone, I think the BBC Writers Room is pretty fab. Though it’s primarily a screenwriting resource, the advice on there is universal. David Edgar’s How Plays Work is essential if you’re wanting to hone your theatrical craft. And then, of course, there’s every book ever written. Each time you pick up something to read, be it in your genre or something new entirely, you absorb, learn and grow.

A top tip for other writers?
Write! It doesn’t matter where, when or how much… just go for it. If you’re writing, you can call yourself a writer. If you’re not, you can’t.

About Atlas: The Story of Pa Salt – The epic conclusion to the Seven Sisters series 
Spanning a lifetime of love and loss, crossing borders and oceans, Atlas: The Story of Pa Salt draws the Seven Sisters series to its stunning, unforgettable conclusion. The sisters must confront the idea that their adored father was someone they barely knew – and, even more shockingly, that his long-buried secrets may still echo through the generations today.

 

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The Seven Sisters Series (continued)

At the beginning of 2023 I posted about how much I was enjoying the books in Lucinda Riley’s Seven Sisters Series. That post has become one of my most popular ever (alongside Icebreakers for Creative Writing Classes) and therefore I’m following it up with a ‘part two’.

Since January I’ve read books four and five in the series: The Pearl Sister and The Moon Sister. Again, I completely lost myself in the stories and learned something along the way.The Moon Sister jpg

In The Pearl Sister, Ce Ce, the fourth daughter of Pa Salt, travels to Australia and follows clues to the discovery of her ancestors amongst the pearl industry of a century ago. There’s love and relationships as well as mystery and intrigue.

It’s Tiggy’s turn to discover her roots in The Moon Sister. Tiggy is a nature lover and wildlife conservationist. Her story spans the wilds of the Scottish Highlands in the present day to the gypsies of Granada in Spain several generations ago. This is the only book in the series that made me do a ‘second take’ on one of the sentences. Towards the end of the book, Tiggy is in conversation with someone she particularly admires and decides that this lady is who she aspires to be one day, describing her as a ‘… wife, mother, homemaker, full-time vet and lovely, lovely human being.’ It made me wonder how healthy it would be for a person to strive to be all of those things. That goal sounds like a recipe for stress overload – I’m sure many of you will agree that for a woman to ‘have it all’ is very difficult. However, it didn’t spoil the book, it just made me think – and surely that’s a good reaction to a book?

I’m going through the stories gradually because I find they are better enjoyed with a gap in between, during which I read lots of other genres including crime and also novels for the book group which I run. I save The Seven Sisters for high days and holidays when I have the time to read big, indulgent chunks in one session. I’m looking forward to picking the next one up in a few months’ time!

And if you enjoy books about people, their pasts and their relationships, you might also enjoy Little Museum of Hope, described in one review as, “4one big blanket of optimism to wrap around the reader. I loved it”.

P.S. You might also be interested in this quick fire Q & A with Harry Whittaker, Lucinda’s son.

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The Seven Sisters Series by Lucinda Riley

The Shadow Sister

The Seven Sisters – Book Three

A few months ago I mentioned on my Facebook page that I’m currently working my way through The Seven Sisters series by Lucinda Riley. These are wonderful doorstep size tomes which drag you in and make you look forward to any spare minutes for absorbing more of the story. I’m around halfway through the third book, The Shadow Sister. The series was recommended to me by my sister-in-law and it’s a recommendation that was well deserved.
In a nutshell: the elusive billionaire, Pa Salt, dies leaving each of his six adopted daughters a clue about their true heritage. Each book is a timeslip novel which follows one of the girls in the search for their roots. The historical part of each story is based around a real-life happening and I’ve found these educational as well as enjoyable fiction. The contemporary part of the story contains an element of romance. Both parts are equally compelling!

The Seven Sisters by Lucinda Riley

The Seven Sisters – Book 1

Book one follows eldest daughter, Maia, to Brazil in the hunt for her heritage and the historical part deals with the construction of the giant Christ the Redeemer Statue in Rio. In book two, sister Ally investigates her connection to Grieg’s iconic music for Ibsen’s play ‘Peer Gynt’. Book three is set in the UK and features Edward VII and his mistress, Alice Keppel – I have yet to uncover the full significance of this to the search of the third sister, Star, for her roots. It’s intriguing!
An ongoing mystery runs throughout all the books – why did Pa Salt never adopt and bring home his planned seventh daughter? Apparently, all is revealed in the last book of the series, aptly named, The Missing Sister.
Lucinda’s books are popular across the globe and, uniquely for a fiction author from the British Isles, over 90% of her sales have been in foreign languages. According to the Lucinda Riley website, there are plans to create a seven-season TV series based on The Seven Sisters.
Lucinda was diagnosed with cancer in 2017 and died in 2021, aged only 56. ‘The Missing Sister’ was published only three weeks before she died.
If you get the chance to read these books – DO!

P.S. You might also be interested in this quick fire Q & A with Harry Whittaker, Lucinda’s son.

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