Happy 2013!

A great start to 2013! Booktopia, one of Australia’s major online booksellers, is running a poll this month to find Australia’s Favourite Novelist – and I’ve made it through to the final round of voting 🙂 There are 75 authors in this last round, and the top 50 will be revealed, 10 each day, next week, building up to the big reveal of the Top 10.

There’s still time to vote, and the good news is you can vote for more than one author (because seriously, there are so many fantastic authors on the list how could anyone pick just one?) So do check out the poll and cast tramadol your vote!

And the second piece of great news so far this month is that Dead Heat is a finalist in Favourite Romantic Suspense section of the Australian Romance Readers Awards 🙂 I’m thrilled to be a finalist again and am looking forward to the Australian Romance Readers Convention and the Awards night in Brisbane in early March.

A huge thank you to all of my readers who have voted for me in the ARRA awards and the Booktopia poll! We writers wouldn’t be anywhere without readers, and it’s fantastic to know that my books have been enjoyed by so many people.

2012-ARRA-finalist

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Wonderful Sharjah

Finally, my belated post about the Sharjah International Book Fair! It was a fantastic experience, and I’m very grateful to have been invited and to have had the opportunity to visit Sharjah and be part of the Book Fair. (For those of you not familiar with Sharjah, it is one of the United Arab Emirates; the city of Sharjah is right next to Dubai, and the Emirate of Sharjah stretches across the Arab peninsular.)

First up, let me just say that flying business class on Emirates has totally spoiled me for future air travel! It’s so much more comfortable than economy class, especially the seats that fold out to become beds. It was great to able to sleep fairly comfortably, and to arrive relatively refreshed even at 7am. Being met at the gate and escorted through Customs, complete with a porter to look after my (heavy) suitcase was also something I could get entirely used to. Oh, and the chauffer-driven car from the airport direct to the hotel…

…where this was the view across the Khalid Lagoon from my room (complete with reflections on my window – sorry):

View from Hilton Hotel Sharjah across the Khalid Lagoon

View from Hilton Hotel, Sharjah, across Khalid Lagoon

Sharjah Hilton hotel view across Khalid Lagoon

(Note – the haze isn’t smog – it’s sand, apparently blown across the Arabian Gulf. The air was clearer later in the week.)

That first morning I found fellow Australian Kim Wilkins (who also writes as Kimberley Freeman) and we met up with some of the fantastic team from Midas Public Relations, who are London-based but who organise the author visits for the Book Fair. The lovely Sheerin from Midas (with awe-inspiring organisational skills!), on realising we had most of the day ahead free, arranged a driver to take us to the Blue Souk:

Entrance to the Blue Souk, Sharjah

Blue Souk, Sharjah

One wing of the Souk has mostly traditional clothes, scarves etc, with a few other shops. The other wing has jewellery – shops and shops full of elaborate gold jewellery! (But we didn’t buy any.) Although it’s quite modern, the Souk is built in traditional Arabic style. Note the wind towers – pre-air conditioning, these were used to enable hot air to escape, and cooling sea breezes to circulate.

Back to the hotel for an afternoon rest, then it was time to get ready for my first Book Fair event – a panel on Women’s Writing and Women’s Voices with Kim, and Emirati authors Sahla Ghabish and Sara Al Jarwan. The panel went very well. All the panels had simultaneous translation, with panelists and audience supplied with headsets to tune to either English or Arabic and the translators sitting in a booth at the back, doing a fantastic job. Sahla Ghabish was an excellent moderator of our panel, and the simultaneous translation meant that despite the language differences, we could have a good conversation. The audience started off as mostly men, but a few more women arrived during the panel. Questions came from the men in the audience – I felt they were interested, curious, but supportive and open to listening and learning, so I was very comfortable and happy with how the panel went.

A note here that while Sharjah is one of the more conservative of the Emirates, it is not as conservative as places like Saudi Arabia. Women take an active role in Emirati life; they enjoy freedoms and opportunities as we do in the west, and are senior in government and business. Both women and men dress modestly. Women’s writing may not get equal attention there as men’s writing does – but it doesn’t in Australia, either!

Prior to our panel, we did an interview with a local newspaper journalist about
women’s writing, which was a very interesting discussion. The article did appear in the paper, but only in Arabic, and my Arabic is non-existant, other than a couple of words I learned on the trip.

The Book Fair itself is a huge event. Book Fairs are usually about publishers and agents buying and selling bok rights, and SIBF does this during the first 3 days. But it goes for 10 days, and is a significant public event, with hundreds of thousands of people attending. There are publishers and booksellers from around the world, filling the huge Expo Centre with their stalls. Because book distribution and book buying in the Emirates isn’t as easy (yet) as in other countries, and because there are many people living in Sharjah and Dubai who are from other countries, the Book Fair is a great opportunity for residents to stock up on books. Some people buy their years’ supply of books at the Fair, and it was quite common to see people pushing shopping trolleys loaded to overflowing with books.

The SIBF also features a cultural program, with panels, readings, workshops, and other events running throughout the 10 days. Egypt was the guest country of honour this year, and there were regular dance displays in the evening, winding through the Expo centre. There is also huge support for children’s literacy and many events for children and families, including an outdoor theatre with performances of plays.

The guest authors were very well looked after, with a green room at the Expo Centre, meals in one of the hotel restaurants paid for, and opportunities for tours each morning. I went on one – but that day I was the only person who went, so I had a large bus, bus driver and tour guide all to myself. First stop was a visit to a mosque, and a presentation by women from the Department of Culture’s cultural education section about Islam and Sharjah culture. As there was only me, it was very relaxed and interesting, and the two women and I had a great discussion. I do know a reasonable amount about Islam, but I learned more. A gentleman demonstrated the call to prayer – it is very beautiful! – and the prayers themselves.

From there we went to the Museum of Islamic Culture, and the guide showed me around it. He was an excellent guide, very well educated, very proud about Islamic/Arabic culture and it’s role in the world but also very interested in other places and cultures. I think he was impressed that I was aware of many of the contributions of Arabic culture, in general if not detail, particularly in medicine, science and mathematics. We had enjoyable discussions and I found the museum, and the whole tour, very interesting.

I’d been feeling a little guilty that with all the SIBF was doing for me, they only asked me to do one panel and one school visit during the 5 days, and I expressed this to Sheerin, but she assured me that cultural exchange was a key objective of the book fair. So I hope I held up my end of the exchange, in learning about Sharjah and representing Australia well. And I did learn a great deal, although I’d love to go back some time and learn more.

This post is getting very long, but I must add that I visited the Victoria International School in Sharjah, and that was a great experience, too. I had an audience of about 100 high school students, and after I talked for 10 minutes or so about how I started writing, we opened it up to questions, and they were keen interviewers! All sorts of questions, about writing, about reading, about how much do you earn (!), about writer’s block, about ideas…It was fun for me, and I hope the students as well.

Oh, and on my last night, I met up with some knitters that I’d ‘met’ through Ravelry, the huge online knitting community. We had a lovely evening at a cafe in a shopping mall, knitting, eating, talking – and becoming friends. It was a lovely relaxed way to finish my wonderful Sharjah experience.

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Sharjah International Book Fair

I’m popping in during a busy time to mention how excited I am that in just three days, I will be at the airport, on my way to the United Arab Emirates for the Sharjah International Book Fair. 

I’m incredibly honoured to be invited to this prestigious event. While Book Fairs are usually very focused on publishers and agents buying and selling publishing rights, the Sharjah International Book Fair has a significant cultural program that runs alongside the rights fair, and there are 150 authors from round the world attending, with a wide range of events open to the public including panel discussions, readings and book signings. Sharjah, one of the United Arab Emirates, is passionate about books and hopes to promote both cultural exchange and understanding as well as Sharjah’s own heritage and contemporary creativity. The Book Fair is strongly supported by His Highness Dr. Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammad Al Qasimi, the UAE Supreme Council Member and Ruler of Sharjah, and by The Department of Culture & Information.

It’s the first time Australia has participated in the Book Fair, and two other Australian authors are going – Kim Wilkins (who also writes as Kimberley Freeman) and Tony Cavanaugh. Kim and I will be there at the same time and are hoping to do some sightseeing together if there’s time.

I am very much looking forward to the trip, and am deeply appreciative of the invitation and the opportunity to attend. There’s a wonderful rich history of Arabic literature and a thriving contemporary literary culture, and that will be celebrated at the Book Fair. But there will also be authors and publishers from around the world, with many coming this year from Pakistan and India, and also from Europe, other parts of Asia, and North America. So many cultures, so many stories, so many voices – it’s going to be a fascinating and wonderful experience!

I will spend five days in Sharjah and among the events I will be involved will be a panel discussion on What Inspires our Voice: Women Writing for Women, with Iraqi writer Hawra Al-Nadawi, Emirati novelist Sara Al Jarwan, and fellow Australian novelist Kimberley Freeman.

I don’t know how much internet access I will have while I’m away, but I will try to post some photos and blog updates if I can. In the meantime, here’s an image of Sharjah city from Wikipedia, so you can picture me there!

View of Sharjah

 

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New title!

Deadlines – no, thats not my new title, but it’s the reason its been vewy, vewy quiet around here.

However, had to come and announce the title of the book I’m madly working on now. It’s the third Dungirri book, it’s scheduled for publication in April September next year, and it will be called:

Darkening Skies

Those of you who’ve been anxiously waiting for Mark’s story will be pleased to hear that this is it 🙂

 

 

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Bellingen

Wednesday was a wonderful day – a mini-holiday to one of my favourite places, with some of my favourite people!

I left home shortly after 8am, heading east across the tablelands to Ebor, then winding along the ridges towards the Dorrigo Plateau. The sun shone, the road was quiet, and the views were gorgeous – it is a beautiful landscape. Particularly along the ridges, the road is narrow with not a lot of stopping places, so getting photographs can be a challenge – but I have found one stretch with views where it is safe to pull over to the (narrow) side.

Mountain views near Dorrigo, New South Wales

(I’ve used the zoom lens so the view is a little shortened in this photo).

From Dorrigo, it’s down the winding narrow mountain road to the township of Bellingen – relaxed, sunny, with plenty of cafĂ©s to enjoy meeting up with writing friends:

Karly Lane, Diane Curran, Bronwyn Parry, Jenn J McLeod, Helene Young in Bellingen

From right to left – romantic thriller author Helene Young, Jenn McLeod (watch for her debut novel next year!), me, Diane Curran (she’ll have a debut novel soon too, I’m sure!), rural romance author Karly Lane , and Jeanette McA, cheerleader, supporter, and great friend to us all.

Then it was off to Bellingen Library, where fantastic librarian Sharon Uthman hosted an author talk with Helene, Karly and me. Very relaxed, a lot of fun, and some great questions from the audience.

Helene Young, Bronwyn Parry & Karly Lane at Bellingen Library

All in all, a thoroughly pleasant day! Thanks so much to Sharon for inviting us and giving us the opportunity to get together.

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