Photo courtesy of Maddie Please |
I’m delighted to welcome author
Polly Heron to the blog for the first time. Her new book, The Surplus Girls, will be published by Corvus on January 2nd 2020. Polly also writes
as Susanna Bavin.
Polly, welcome. Please tell us
about your writing. What is the appeal of family sagas to you?
It’s lovely to be here, Jan.
Thank you for inviting me. I suppose that, like many writers, I write what I
want to read. I love strong, dramatic story-lines peopled by well-rounded, credible
characters who develop and are changed by their experiences. For me, the cherry
on the cake is the historical setting. I am fascinated by social history. I
love to see characters, especially women, having to cope with challenges within
the social and legal context of the time. I also enjoy the domestic history –
the clothes, food, furniture and so on.
The Surplus Girls is your
first book writing as Polly Heron. What is the novel about and what was its
inspiration?
The real surplus girls were
that generation of young women whose possible husband perished on the
battlefields in the Great War. These were girls who had grown up expecting to
get married, but now they faced a lifetime of fending for themselves. I have
always been interested in the problems women faced in the past and this one
appealed to me, partly because it is in living memory. When my mother was at
grammar school, her teachers had been surplus girls.
How will the novel fit in with
your other books, written as Susanna Bavin? For example, the themes, location
and historical period?
Certain themes will be familiar
to readers of my Susanna Bavin books – the social and financial position of
women in the past. There is a will that causes complications. I once heard a
radio programme about wills and a solicitor said, ‘Where there’s a will,
there’s a war.’ I love that! A will featured in The Poor Relation and
there’s another in The Surplus Girls. And I also explore the themes of
loss and loyalty, both of which are deeply important to Belinda, the heroine.
As for the period, the book is
set in 1922, so around the same time as The Deserter’s Daughter and A
Respectable Woman. And I explore familiar territory, as much of the story
is set in Chorlton, though Belinda’s family lives up the road in Stretford. My
dad was a talented artist and he drew some highly detailed maps of Chorlton as
it was when he was growing up in the 20s and 30s, so I know the exact location
of various shops etc.
Having been impressed that
you’ve previously written detailed synopses of your novels before writing them,
I now try to do that myself as part of planning a new story. Did you do that
for The Surplus Girls?
Very much so! When you’re
writing a series, you can’t afford to take chances. Whatever gets published in
book 1, you’re stuck with, even if it turns out to be unhelpful to what happens
in book 2 or 3, so it seems to me that planning in advance is essential. I have
a mammoth 20-something page synopsis. Planning in detail was a big help in
creating the links between the stories. For example, there is a small
plot-point in book 1 that turns into a major plot-point in book 3.
Which came first, the
characters or the plot?
The characters, definitely. The
heroine is Belinda, who got engaged to Ben when she was just 15 and went to
live with his mother and grandmother. She was more than happy to do so, not
just to be part of Ben’s family, but also to escape from a pretty awful home
life with her money-grabbing, ne’er-do-well father and downtrodden,
self-pitying mother, not to mention younger brothers running wild. But Ben is
killed in action in the final year of the Great War, leaving Belinda in the odd
position of being almost-but-not-quite a widow. Four years later, when the
story starts, Belinda has laid Ben’s memory to rest, but his mother and
grandmother very definitely haven’t. How can Belinda start to make something of
her life when the two women to whom she owes so much are determined to keep her
swathed in black for ever?
With Belinda and her situation
so firmly established in my mind, it was easy to see how her plot would
develop. The same is true of Gabriel, the hero.
What are the plans for
subsequent books?
The heroine of the second book
is Molly. She is very different to Belinda – older, more experienced. If the themes
of Belinda’s story are loss and loyalty, then Molly’s are independence and what
we would call sexism. Although each book is part of the series, each one will
also be a stand-alone novel.
If the book is chosen by a book
group, what do you think would make a good discussion question?
What a brilliant question. It
so happens that on my Susanna Bavin website, I have a page of book group
questions for each of my novels and I am in the process of building a bank of
questions for The Surplus Girls.
A general question about the
book as a whole would be: In the book, is it preferable to be a wife, a widow
or a spinster?
A question specific to Belinda
would be: Does Belinda spend too much time trying to please other people?
Great questions. Thank you, Polly. I can’t wait
to read your new book and be introduced to Belinda and the other characters in The
Surplus Girls.
The Surplus Girls - Blurb
The
Surplus Girls is a family
saga set in 1922, four years after the end of the Great War. The heroine is
Belinda, who got engaged at 15 to Ben, who died near the end of the war. Now
Belinda is approaching 21 and, although she will always hold Ben in a special
place in her heart, she knows it is time for her to move on. But how can she,
when Ben’s mother and grandmother, whom she lives with, are still deep in
mourning? As for Belinda’s own family – well, her father has lost more jobs
than you can shake a stick at, and her mother, worn down with shame, is clingy
and demanding.
When Belinda joins a secretarial
class to try to better herself, little does she imagine that it will open up a
whole new world to her. For not only does she learn to type, but she meets the
beguiling bookshop owner Richard Carson... and falls head over heels in love.
But who is this man to whom she has entrusted with her heart, and what does he
really want?
Here are the links:
The Surplus Girls on Amazon https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B07V39X5BB/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0
Website: http://www.pollyheron.co.uk/
Twitter:@SusannaBavin
Polly Heron - Author bio
Polly Heron has worked as a librarian, an infant teacher, a carer and a cook. She lives on the beautiful North Wales coast with her husband and two rescue cats, but she originally hails from Manchester. Her writing is influenced by her Mancunian roots which provide the setting and inspiration for her family sagas.
Twitter:@SusannaBavin
Polly Heron - Author bio
Polly Heron has worked as a librarian, an infant teacher, a carer and a cook. She lives on the beautiful North Wales coast with her husband and two rescue cats, but she originally hails from Manchester. Her writing is influenced by her Mancunian roots which provide the setting and inspiration for her family sagas.
Polly’s saga series, The Surplus
Girls, is set in Manchester and explores what happened to girls who, after
the terrible death toll of the Great war, faced life alone. Each book is also a
stand-alone novel.
Thank you for reading. I'm sure, like me, you enjoyed finding out more about Polly and her new series. Do you enjoy reading series of family sagas? What area has inspired your writing? I'd love it if you shared your thoughts. Thank you.
You may also follow me on Twitter @JanBayLit on on my Jan Baynham Writer Facebook page.
All the best to Polly for her latest novel - it's a wonderful title and a fascinating subject!
ReplyDeleteThank you for commenting and sending your good wishes, Sara. I can’t wait to read Polly’s first book.
ReplyDelete