Guest Interview with Jill Barry
My guest this week is
no stranger to the blog. She has appeared on a number of occasions before and
is my very good writer friend, Sandra Mackness, who writes under the name of
Jill Barry. She has had over twenty novels published, as paperbacks, ebooks and
Linford Romance large print paperbacks. Her latest novel, Love Thirty was
published by Endeavour Media on 16th February.
Welcome to the blog
again, Sandra.
It’s great to be
back! Thanks for inviting me here again, Jan.
After seeing so many
of your novels in print, how exciting was the publication of Love Thirty for
you?
My new novel
began life in 2009 and went through the RNA’s New Writer Scheme, receiving a
positive and helpful response. While in the process of submitting it and
receiving rejections, I was of course working on another novel and Love Thirty was consigned to my ‘virtual drawer.’ I was kept so busy writing pocket novels
for D C Thomson, and longer length novels for Ulverscroft Linford Romance and
Endeavour Press that Love Thirty languished! Last summer, I wanted to submit a
book to Endeavour Press (now Endeavour Media) and, luckily, my editor was taken
with Love Thirty. So, yes, it was very exciting, after completing a lot of
revisions, to see the novel published and I’m now exploring paperback options
for it.
Can you please tell
us about the inspiration for the novel?
I fell in love with tennis at around age nine and watched
every possible moment of Wimbledon ’s TV
coverage from my teenage years upwards. Having been fortunate enough to attend
on several occasions, I’ve observed the crowds and the celebrities in the Royal
Box. I’ve also wandered around Queen’s Club and exchanged greetings with tennis
stars and personalities plus watched Andy Murray practising when not bantering
with his competitors! It’s a fickle world and I knew it would be challenging to
create a tennis player hero as athletes are, justifiably, intensely driven and
often lead lonely lives on the ATP Tour. I’ve been heartened by some of my reviewers’
comments about hero Nick Pereira and it’s great to know I succeeded in making
him ‘real.’
Where does the book
fit in with your other novels?
With the exception of The House Sitter, all Jill Barry
novels and novellas contain that old thing called romance, although in varying
degrees from raunchy to tender teenage love. However, I enjoy giving my
heroines a poignant back-story, e.g. early widowhood, although in Georgia
Lyle’s case, marriage to Nick (as a tennis wife) causes her to question her own
career ambitions as well as the ticking of her biological clock. So, the title
Love Thirty reflects not only the tennis theme, which isn’t overwhelming, but
also Georgia ’s
feelings about motherhood.
Something that makes the novel differ from my others is
the strong bond between the heroine and her male colleague. They really are
good buddies. Photographer Andy eventually falls for an enigmatic character so
the plot also follows this rather rocky relationship. There’s also a lot of
humour when Andy’s around and when Georgia ’s new career catapults her
into the celebrity chef zone.
I admire authors
like Jilly Cooper and the late, much loved, Penny Vincenzi, so Love Thirty gave
me the opportunity to create a longer cast list than I normally provide and to take
my heroine to some rather exciting places. Failure to communicate their deepest
needs to one another almost destroys any chance of a happy ending for my
leading man and lady but…I’ll say no more!
As well as being a love story, as you say, Love Thirty deals with a
number of other issues. Would you like to tell us what they are?
How people can jump to the wrong conclusion plays an important part in
the plot. Georgia
is convinced Nick can’t possibly love her any more and there are times when I
felt like knocking their heads together. But I needed them to go their own ways
before bringing them together again, a meeting that resulted in a life-changing
situation. A traumatic childhood has made Andy’s girlfriend the person she is
and because he’s such a favourite of mine, I wanted to give him a happy ending
too. There are also dark issues underpinning Nick’s parents’ marriage and when
the full truth is revealed to Nick and his older brother, it makes the two much
closer than they were.
Why was it important
to you to raise these issues?
People often envy others their lives, simply because they
so often watch celebrities moving in exalted company and athletes enjoying
adulation. But behind the glitz lie much hard work and failure before success
arrives. Tennis players, in particular, are vulnerable to injury and their top
ten playing career is usually quite short, unless you’re Roger Federer of
course! I think I’m trying to say that behind all the flash photography and the
ritzy restaurants, the love and comradeship two people share is the real
driving element in a relationship. That’s why I wanted to make Love Thirty into
more than a love story.
I know you are a huge
tennis fan - and you've confirmed this earlier - so I wasn’t surprised to find that your hero, Nick, was a top tennis
player. How much research into the lives of professional tennis players did you
have to do?
Fortunately, I
had already read the autobiographies of several of my favourites and followed
the careers of our most recent top ten British players. After I planned Nick’s
rise through the rankings, I contacted the International Tennis Federation to
see if it was plausible. So the person who replied to me gets a mention in the
acknowledgments. I came face to face with former Wimbledon champion, Pat Cash, a
couple of years ago in London at Queen’s Club and on another occasion my
courtside seat gave me a great view of Ivan Lendl and David Beckham sitting in
the British Number One’s box. I tried to recreate that kind of atmosphere for
the Wimbledon scene where Georgia
waves to the wife of a well-known player.
And finding out about
the world of high-class restaurants and chefs?
Sandra's lemon drizzle cake. |
The characters in
your book are real and rounded so I felt I’d got to know them very well by the
end of their story. Which came first the characters or the story itself?
Heroine Georgia
arrived first and I always knew her colleague Andy had more than a soft spot
for her. Bringing in Nick offered the chance for her to escape her misogynist
boss and, eventually, for her to branch out in a very different direction from
the tennis and journalistic worlds.
Would you consider a
sequel to Georgia
and Nick’s story?
What are you
currently working on?
Well, that’s a tempting thought, given I was sad to leave
my characters, but I don’t think there’ll be a sequel. Currently I’m working on
a Christmas novella (sorry to mention that
word) and I’ve begun mapping out the first book of what I hope will be a
trilogy, drawing on the lives and loves of three women from the late 1930s
until present day. So, mother, daughter and granddaughter. Whether I’m writing
a contemporary novel, or going back to past times, it’s always an exciting
journey.
What has been your
proudest writing moment to date?
I suspect no author forgets the joy of seeing his or her
work in print for the very first time. But, after applying to study for my MA
in creative writing, decades after I passed my A Levels, I was thrilled to be
accepted purely on the strength of work submitted.
Thank you so much for taking time to chat to me, Sandra. I
wish you good luck and lots of sales with your lovely book.
It’s my
pleasure, Jan. I’ve enjoyed our conversation very much. Here are some links to me and my books:
Love Thirty is published by Endeavour Media
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jill-Barry/e/B00FE0GQJ0 - my author page gives details of my novels and novellas, the themes of which
are reflected in my book covers.
Jill Barry also has her own Facebook author page:
It would be great if you could come along and ‘Like’ my
page.
Twitter: @barry_jill
It would be lovely if you’d follow me and
mention Jan’s blog so I can follow you back.
My thoughts on ‘Love
Thirty’: 5*
I thoroughly enjoyed reading Love Thirty. It has all the
ingredients of a pacy well-crafted romance story between Georgia and Nick to be
savoured for its ‘feel-good’ quality. In it, you’ll find fun, humour, passion
and emotion. However, in addition, Sandra explores a number of other issues: the pressures that
being in celebrity limelight puts on personal relationships, friendship,
developing careers and taking advantage of second chances. She has created
authentic well rounded characters that come alive on the page. You are made to
feel how they feel, see what they see, and, in the restaurant scenes, taste
what they taste! Love Thirty takes us
into the world of tennis, media and food as well as transporting the reader to
the romantic city of Paris
where part of the story is set. Highly recommended.
Thank you for reading. I hope you enjoyed finding out about Sandra and her writing.
You may also follow me on Twitter @JanBayLit and on my Jan Baynham Writer Facebook page.
Thank you for reading. I hope you enjoyed finding out about Sandra and her writing.
You may also follow me on Twitter @JanBayLit and on my Jan Baynham Writer Facebook page.
Sandra's latest novel sounds very tempting, Jan. Going behind the scenes in the tennis world is a really interesting idea. I'm always intrigued by tennis players, I think it's because their families are put on display for the public, so you feel you know about their lives when of course it's mostly assumption. Im sure 'Thirty Love' will do very well for Sandra / Jill. Thanks for posting the interview!
ReplyDeleteThanks for your very astute comment, Sara. Enjoy your day.
DeleteThank you for commenting, Sara. Yes, to look behind the glamour and what the public see is always going to be interesting. 🙂
DeleteI think the story sounds fascinating, with its mixture of the worlds of tennis and high-class cooking. I enjoyed the tantalising glimpse Jill/Sandra gave of the back stories that have shaped her characters. Why people are the way they are is so important and adds extra depth to a story and to the development of each character. Another terrific interview, Jan.
ReplyDeleteThanks for taking the time to comment, Susanna. I write character driven fiction but Jan's questions weren't only interesting but are helping me go that little bit further with the main characters in my current work in progress.
DeleteThank you, Sue. I loved the characters in ‘Love Thirty’ and felt I’d got to know them very well by the end of the book. Their back stories made them who they were.
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ReplyDeleteI think story is really going to be amazing. It sounds interesting for me I love to read romance story and novel has the exact what I need to read right now in these days. I got
ReplyDeleteeBooks Download online and starts reading the novel. I can't wait to read the novel.
Thanks forr the post
ReplyDelete