#EventReview Michael Joseph Proof Party at Henley Literary Festival 2019

This is a longer version of a review that appeared on The Henley Standard website. It is based on notes I took during the event and my own recollections. Any errors in recording views expressed during the discussion are my own.

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Stephanie Wrobel, Hope Adams and Stephanie Cross preparing to address the audience

After being welcomed onboard Hobbs of Henley’s Hibernia with a glass of fizz, book critic and writer Stephanie Cross got the party started by introducing us to authors Stephanie Wrobel and Hope Adams. (As we were blessed with the presence of two Stephanies, to avoid confusion, SC in this blog post refers to Stephanie Cross.) Both authors have debut novels out next year so SC remarked it seemed fitting today’s event was taking place on a boat; a maiden voyage in more than one sense.  Hope’s novel even opens on board a ship on the River Thames.  She described both books, The Recovery of Rose Gold and Conviction, as “twisty, stay up all night reads”.

SC then invited Hope and Stephanie to talk about their books, the inspiration behind them and read short extracts.

Hope explained that whilst visiting an exhibition of quilts at the Victoria & Albert Museum in 2009 she’d been intrigued to learn that one beautiful example was sewn by female convicts aboard a ship, the Rajah.  When she discovered that, by the end of the three month voyage, one of the prisoners had become engaged to the Captain, the idea for Conviction was born. She quipped that if she’d made up that last turn of events her editor would probably have said, ‘Don’t be silly’. For various reasons, Hope only took up the idea for the book again in 2016.

Asked about her research for the book, Hope said the voyage was quite well-documented but admitted she’d invented an awful lot such as changing real names. The exception was the three main characters, including the book’s heroine, Kezia Hayter.  Kezia was the cousin of George Hayter, court painter to Queen Victoria. Hope then read a scene from the book in which Kezia tells her fellow prisoners about the time she met Queen Victoria.

SC asked Hope about the other female characters who feature in the book, christened the ‘Newgate Nannies’. Hope said she’d invented them to introduce a bit of grit in the form of some hard, rough, tough women and also because her daughter (who just happens to be bestselling author Sophie Hannah) always tells her she can’t do ‘proper’ villains. The ‘Newgate Nannies’ are there to provide a bit of comedy as well, she explained, although they’re definitely women you wouldn’t want to cross.

The novel opens with (in Hope’s words) a “dastardly deed” and the reader soon learns one of the women is not who she says she is.  She explained there were 200 women on the ship but only twenty who sewed the quilt, so that helped her narrow down the number of suspects. Given all the suspects are in one place making it a classic closed room mystery, SC wondered how much of a challenge it was to be confined to one location? Hope said she ‘cheated’ by allowing the reader to go back in time to the past lives of three of the women.

SC felt the book really immerses the reader in life on board the Rajah and asked Hope about her research. Hope confessed it’s easy to get so excited about research that you never get around to writing. Engagingly self-deprecating, she described herself as ‘extremely lazy’ when it comes to research, claiming she read one book and that was it. However, she was fortunate to be contacted by an old friend who just happens to be an expert in 19th century textiles. Asked about the book’s title – Conviction – Hope explained it has a double meaning in the sense that the women are convicts but also Kezia is an extremely pious Christian with strong religious belief.

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In Stephanie’s novel, Rose Gold spends the first eighteen years of her life believing she is sick. However it transpires her mother, Patty, has made it all up and there was nothing wrong with Rose Gold at all.  Stephanie described The Recovery of Rose Gold as being about “obsession, reconciliation, revenge and the unbreakable bond between mother and daughter”. She then read an excerpt from the first chapter of the book.

Stephanie said the idea for the book arose from the experience of a close friend who is a teacher and became concerned about a student. Stephanie started to research Munchausen’s syndrome and was intrigued to learn the perpetrators are usually mothers. Told from the alternating points of view of Rose Gold and her mother, Stephanie confessed she found getting inside the head of Patty a ‘meaty challenge’ but one she relished. Observing the adage that every villain in a story believes they’re the hero, she said she’d tried hard to make Patty a well-rounded character.

SC observed that early on in the book the reader learns Patty has poisoned Rose Gold but in another sort of novel that could have been the ‘big reveal’. Had Stephanie at any point considered making the disclosure of this fact the ending of the book? Stephanie said no because she was more interested in allowing the reader to get inside the head of Patty. SC asked if Patty’s voice had come to her easily. Stephanie said it had – a ‘sarcastic, snippy tone’ with a Midwestern accent. Getting Rose Gold’s voice had been a lot harder and took a number of drafts. For instance, being socially isolated, with no TV and her reading restricted, Rose Gold wouldn’t be aware of some colloquialisms.

Asked if they had any advice for aspiring novelists, both Hope and Stephanie were strong advocates of the benefit of an agent and of having a plan of the outline structure of a book before starting to write. Hope joked that her daughter positively insists she does this. Stephanie said she’d found the feedback from tutors and fellow students on her Creative Writing degree invaluable. (The Recovery of Rose Gold was her thesis.)

The two authors shared their experience of being edited. Having worked in advertising previously, Stephanie was used to having her work critiqued. She observed that, when someone wants to publish your book, you soon feel you’re on the same team. Hope said she’d always been very happy to have others suggest changes – adding jokingly, ‘As long as I agree with them!’ A good editor, she feels, will suggest ‘What about doing this?’ and she’ll wonder, ‘Why didn’t I think of that?’

At this point Hope said she thought she should come clean that, although Conviction is a debut for Hope Adams, this is a pseudonym and as her real self (Adele Geras) she has been writing for forty years, mainly books for children and teenagers. She decided to use a pseudonym because she wanted to make Conviction a very different book and chose a plain name and one with a surname at the top of the alphabet – useful on bookshop shelves! She joked that she’s had to practice a new signature. (She got plenty of practice shortly afterwards as we queued to have her sign our proof copies!)

Questions from the audience included:

  • How both authors feel about reviews and reader feedback – Hope regretted it is so difficult to get reviews, especially of children’s books and women’s fiction. Stephanie said she’d been advised not to read reviews on Amazon or Goodreads!
  • If, now they write, they’re put off reading books or if it’s still a real pleasure – Hope says she reads totally uncritically but has no patience with books she’s not enjoying and pleaded with us not to be ‘dutiful readers’ and finish books for the sake of it. Stephanie says she loves reading across all genres.
  • What they’re working on next – Hope is still focused on seeing Conviction through its final stages to publication. Stephanie is writing her second book which involves cults and is told from three points of view.

20191002_111651-1_resizedThose of us lucky enough to attend the event left with proof copies of both books. Other readers will have to wait until next year to get their hands on copies. However, on the evidence of today, it will be well worth the wait.

Thanks to Michael Joseph, Henley Literary Festival and Hobbs of Henley for organising a fantastic event.

 

Book Review: In My Life – A Music Memoir by Alan Johnson

In My Life SignedAbout the Book

From being transported by the sound of ‘True Love’ by Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly on the radio, as a small child living in condemned housing in ungentrified West London in the late 1950s, to going out to work as a postman humming ‘Watching the Detectives’ by Elvis Costello in 1977, Alan Johnson’s life has always had a musical soundtrack. In fact music hasn’t just accompanied his life, it’s been an integral part of it.

In the bestselling and award-winning tradition of This Boy, In My Life vividly transports us to a world that is no longer with us – a world of Dansettes and jukeboxes, of heartfelt love songs and heart-broken ballads, of smoky coffee shops and dingy dance halls. From Bob Dylan to David Bowie, from Lonnie Donnegan to Bruce Springsteen, all of Alan’s favourites are here. As are, of course, his beloved Beatles, whom he has worshipped with undying admiration since 1963.

But this isn’t just a book about music. In My Life adds a fourth dimension to the story of Alan Johnson the man.

Format: Hardcover (272 pp.)    Publisher: Bantam Press
Published: 20th September 2018   Genre: Non-Fiction, Memoir

Find In My Life: A Music Memoir on Goodreads

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Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme


My Review

As the reader quickly discovers, music has always been an integral part of Alan Johnson’s life. The book covers the period from 1957 to 1982 (he was born in 1950) so overlaps with the first two volumes of his memoirs, This Boy and Please Mr. Postman. Those who’ve read either of those books may feel there’s some repetition. I’ve only read the third volume, The Long and Winding Road (although you can read my husband’s review of Please Mr. Postman here) but reading the early chapters of In My Life with its poignant picture of Alan’s deprived childhood has only increased my interest in reading This Boy.

Each chapter of the book is linked to a song. As Alan explains, they’re not necessarily his favourite pieces of music but are songs that evoke particular memories of his life at that time. For example, listening to Two-Way Family Favourites on the family’s Bakelite wireless, playing 78’s on his sister’s Dansette record player, acquiring his first guitar or hearing about the death of John Lennon. As I said, the early chapters demonstrate how for Alan, and his sister, Linda, music was a distraction from the day to day difficulties of growing up in poverty, with a mother who suffered serious ill-health, domestic violence and eventually abandonment at the hands of their loser of a father.

Starting with ‘True Love’ by Bing Crosby and Grace Kelly, the book charts the evolution of popular music as experienced by Alan and other members of his generation.  He observes that before Lonnie Donnegan and Tommy Steele came on the scene there was no real youth music culture in Britain.  Their arrival signalled a huge change as singer/songwriters such as Lennon & McCartney replaced artists who sang songs written by other people.

The book charts another huge change, namely in how people listen to music.  Previously, it was largely on the radio, more likely than not the Light Programme on the BBC.  Gradually there became a ‘materiality’ about how people experienced music. Alan recalls polishing shellac 78s, reading record labels and playing records at the wrong speed on the Dansette. Later in the book, acquiring his first audio cassette, he reflects:

There is a connection between the music and the object on which it is stored. Just as those shellac 78s, and the Bachelors’ album bought for Lily [his mother] which she didn’t live to hear, had a significance of their own, so did the humble cassette. The physical shape and feel of it, the ritual of taking it out of its plastic case and snapping it into the cassette-player, peering myopically at the tiny type of the “sleeve notes” …’

The book is also an account of Alan’s own musical career which, it has to be said, seems to have had more than its fair share of setbacks such as having musical gear stolen on multiple occasions, including his treasured Hӧfner Verithin guitar. Alan joined his first band The Vampires in the hope (largely unsuccessful) of impressing girls before being invited to join The In Between, a multi-racial group with a (rare at the time) female lead singer. With his trademark self-deprecating humour, Alan recalls his unrequited passion for Carmen, the lead singer, with whom he duetted on their cover version of The Troggs’ Wild Thing:

Carmen and I were born to duet on that song, destined to be together in the centre of that stage. It should have forged the deepest, most volcanic passion since Cathy met Heathcliff. There was only one problem. Carmen was totally and absolutely uninterested in me. She was completely immune to what I was convinced was a magnetic and irresistible charm.’

Although Lonnie Donnegan retains a special place as the musical hero of Alan’s childhood, the Beatles and David Bowie as the heroes of his teen years and twenties respectively, he reserves his ‘lifetime achievement award’ for Elvis Costello. Fittingly therefore, and in another example of that self-deprecating humour, it is Elvis Costello who marks the end of Alan’s ambition to make it as a rock star. Alan decides to send Elvis ‘the creme de la creme’ of his ‘song-writing genius’. As he recalls, ‘I wrote a nice letter to Elvis, listing the song titles along with my name and address, and sent it off by first-class post in November 1982. I’m still waiting to hear back.’

As with Alan Johnson’s other memoirs, In My Life is immensely readable, honest, warm and witty. Alan appeared at Henley Literary Festival 2018. You can read my review of the event here.

In My Life is book number 6 of my 20 Books of Summer.


Alan JohnsonAbout the Author

Alan Johnson was born in May 1950.  He was General Secretary of the Communication Workers Union before entering Parliament as Labour MP for Hull West and Hessle in 1997.  He served as Home Secretary from June 2009 to May 2010.  Before that, he filled a wide variety of cabinet positions in both the Blair and Brown governments, including Education and Health.  His first memoir, This Boy, was published in May 2013 and won the RSL Ondaatje Prize and the Orwell Prize.  Alan’s latest book, In My Life: A Music Memoir, was published in September 2018.  (Photo credit: Goodreads author page)

20 Books of Summer 2019