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Coming Home to Maple Lodge by Alison Sherlock #Review

  I am delighted to feature the first in Alison Sherlock's new series set in the Corswolds. Coming Home to Maple Tree Lodge was published by Boldwood Books on June 20th. A family and hotel in desperate need of help… Maple Tree Lodge has been the home of the Jackson family for over a century. But the hotel has never been a success and, following the sudden loss of his father, architect Ben Jackson soon discovers the hotel is close to financial ruin. Ben has to make some tough decisions if the hotel is to survive and his family are to keep a roof over their heads. With the hotel in urgent need of a renovation, Ben’s sister calls on the talents of her best friend, interior designer Lily Watson. Cash strapped Lily needs a successful project to prove to herself and her high-achieving parents that she can carve a successful career and Maple Tree Lodge sounds like just the place for Lily to showcase her talents. However, Lily’s vision for a cosy, country Cotswolds hotel is the com...

Riverflow by Alison Layland #Riverflow @AlisonLayland @honno @damppebbles #damppebblesblogtours


 
Today I have a great guest post by the author, Alison Layland. Her novel, Riverflow, was published in paperback and ebook formats by Honno Press on 20th June 2019.Alison is talking to us about Time and the Writer. First, here's a little about the story.


After a beloved family member is drowned in a devastating flood, Bede and Elin Sherwell want nothing more than to be left in peace to pursue their off-grid life. But when the very real prospect of fracking hits their village, they are drawn in to the frontline protests. During a spring of relentless rain, a series of mysterious threats and suspicious accidents put friendships on the line and the Sherwells' marriage under unbearable tension. Is there a connection with their uncle's death? As the river rises under torrential rain, pressure mounts, Bede's sense of self begins to crumble and Elin is no longer sure who to believe or what to believe in.

Welcome to Books, Life and Everything, Alison. Over to you!



Time and the writer

Time is something that most of us seem to be short of, too much of the time. One song that features often in the various playlists I create for friends, moods and novels, is Sandy Denny’s haunting “Who Knows Where the Time Goes?” Time– the effects of the past, coming to terms with the present, looking to the future – features strongly in my writing, and my new novel Riverflow is no exception. It can also dominate the writer’s life and I often wonder where it goes – who knows, indeed? – as I juggle work, family and other commitments with writing.

I’m sure it’s the same for all writers – however inspired we are, there is always some call on our time. Most of us have second (or third) jobs – mine is translation. Frustratingly, it can also happen that when we finally have time on our hands for our creative work, the words hover elusively out of reach. It’s therefore a good thing to get into a routine of writing every day, to use every tool at our disposal to avoid distractions, and to make time in the way that suits us best.

When I first started writing, my children were small and I used to write in the hour or two after they’d gone to bed, particularly on evenings when my husband was out. As they grew older, and their bedtimes got later and later, my precious writing time dwindled until I had to find another way. I solved it by getting up at 5 or 6 am every morning, which led to the discovery, as late as my forties,that I’m actually an early bird, at my most creative in the mornings.This has stayed with me and I’m still up with the lark even when on holiday.

Once a routine is established, it’s essential to make the most of the time available. I’m fortunate that my career as a freelance translator is largely compatible with writing, as I work for myself and can be flexible when planning my work. However, I still sometimes find that control over workloads and deadlines is an illusion and it’s easy to get pressured. It’s also equally a blessing and a curse that I use the same garden office/writing den, desk and computer for commercial translation work and writing. If a plot idea or snippet of dialogue occurs to me while working on something else to a deadline, the opportunity to jot it down is there, but for concentrated periods of writing, having the same workplace means that making the switch requires more discipline.

For this reason, internet blocker software such as Cold Turkeyis a valuable tool. Although I need the internet to research, both for translating and writing, and social media is also an important part of what I do, rationing my online periods helps me to work more efficiently, freeing up more creative time, and takes away those insistent distractions. Cold Turkey not only blocks the unwanted distracting website, but replaces it with aninspirational message. Having just flicked to the internet (I confess!) I’ve just been shown: “Remember that not getting what you want is sometimes a wonderful stroke of luck,” attributed to the Dalai Lama. Which leads me neatly on to…

Being busy and unable to devote hours at a stretch to writing can be unexpectedly productive. Ideas can pop up in the most surprising places and a random event can be a trigger for a development in the novel I’m working on. Scenes from Riverflow have been inspiredor elaborated on buses and trains, in shops or hospitals, while out walking, baking or doing housework – bizarrely, it often seems that the more mundane the activity, the more vivid the stimulation. It might be an exaggeration to say that washing up is an essential part of my creative process, but I do wonder whether my propensity to play out scenes while gazing out of thewindow over the kitchen sink is the subliminal reason why the kitchen at Alderleat, the smallholding in my novel, is the heart of my characters’ home and the setting for several dramatic scenes.

The insistence of time also played a wider part in the writing of Riverflow. Personal circumstances – moving house, illness of both myself and close family members – meant that the novel took longer than I intended to finish. But the themes underlying my characters’ story –environmental protest and protecting their world – are topical and gave me a sense of urgency as outside events unfolded. Just as time is running out to take effective measures to mitigate and deal with the climate and ecological emergency, the awareness of time running out on a personal, micro level gave me a kind of deadline and a spur to keep writing during difficult times.
I’m glad to say that, with the support of my publisher, Honno Welsh Women’s Press, Riverflow has been published at a time when, despite rapidly moving events, its messages are as relevant as ever.

Alison Layland

Thanks so much for those thoughts, Alison. 

About the Author
 

Alison Layland is a writer and translator. Raised in Newark and Bradford, she now lives on the Wales/Shropshire border. She studied Anglo-Saxon, Norse and Celtic at Cambridge University and translates from German, French and Welsh into English. Her published translations include a number of bestselling novels.

You can follow Alison here: Twitter   |  Facebook   |  Website

Book links: Amazon UK   |  Amazon US   |  Waterstones 
                 |  Foyles  |  Hive  |  Book Depository  

Thanks to Alison Layland, and Emma Welton of Damppebbles Tours for the guest post and a place on the tour.

                                                         Check out the rest of the tour!


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