Here's a link to my review of the novel
Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Amazing New Cover!
Buried Treasure looks amazing with its new cover! Congratulations to Gilli Allan!
Here's a link to my review of the novel
Here's a link to my review of the novel
Tuesday, July 14, 2020
Cover Reveal, Covid-style
She was almost killed, now she writes novels...
Interview with Gilli by Gilli Allan
You know you're in a pandemic when your author friends interview themselves for your blog.
With the Covid19 crisis taken an emotional toll on me and robbing me of a good percentage of my stamina and sanity, my good friend Gilli Allan prodded me to help her promote her novel, Buried Treasure, re-released with a brand new cover.
Click here for my Amazon review of Buried Treasure
Feeling less than able myself to muster up an appropriate congratulatory blog, I let her go it alone. She's a great writer. I love her books. I love her attitude. Take a listen to what she wants to tell you, not about her book but about herself:
Interview with Gilli by Gilli Allan
Gilli Allan, author |
With the Covid19 crisis taken an emotional toll on me and robbing me of a good percentage of my stamina and sanity, my good friend Gilli Allan prodded me to help her promote her novel, Buried Treasure, re-released with a brand new cover.
Click here for my Amazon review of Buried Treasure
Feeling less than able myself to muster up an appropriate congratulatory blog, I let her go it alone. She's a great writer. I love her books. I love her attitude. Take a listen to what she wants to tell you, not about her book but about herself:
Gilli Allan: Thank you for the invitation to your blog.
When and where were you born?
Gilli: I’ll tell you the where but not the
when. Orpington, in Kent, in the United
Kingdom.
Where do you live now?
In Gloucestershire in the West of England,
in an area known as the Cotswold Hills. But not the posh and sedate part,
beloved of Tory grandees, but in a village near the far more counter-culture
and alternative town of Stroud.
Have you ever been in a life or death
situation?
During the summer of my thirteenth year, I
was crossing the road outside my house and was hit by a van. It was a
serious accident; I was thrown about fifteen feet and landed on my face, and apparently
there was a lot of blood. Fortunately, I’ve never had any memory of it although
still suffer from mild PTSD if I have any kind of a shock.
Luckily a police car happened to be
cruising the area and alerted emergency services. I was carted off to hospital
very swiftly and actually made a fairly swift recovery (although I still blame
my creaky knees on being hit by that van, and the dis-function of my thought
processes is obviously due to undetected brain damage!).
What is your favourite colour?
It’s got be yellow, the colour of sunshine,
daffodils and baby chicks. When PVC was all the rage, I had a yellow oilskin (a
proper sea-going garment).
You didn’t go to university. Why not?
My performance at school was indifferent.
The only subject I was good at was art. (I have belatedly come to the
conclusion that I’m dyslexic. I can tick
nearly all the pointers.) I left to go to art school at sixteen but dropped out
after 2 years.
When did you first start writing?
I first decided to write a book when I was
around ten, but the urge to create was soon blighted by the difficulty of
dreaming-up a coherent story. I resurrected the hobby in my young teenage years
and carried on writing – beginning but never finishing – a number of ‘books’. I
did it to please myself, never considering it a serious ambition.
What were you doing when the idea ‘to take
writing seriously’ occurred to you?
I was doing the ironing, while listening to
the radio. I had a three-year-old son, and was unenthusiastic about the idea of
trying to resume work as an illustrator in advertising. What else could I do that would enable me to
stay at home? What else was I good at? A
radio programme came on about Mills and Boon, and the light bulb went on.
But you say you are unable to write a
category romance, what do you mean?
I fully intended to try to write this kind
of book but found I couldn’t do it. Once I’d put pen to paper the plot
instantly took a very non-M&B direction. I am not dissing the genre, but in
giving myself permission, as it were, to try writing seriously, I was instantly
gripped by the magic and potential. I
knew I HAD to finish the book that was unfolding before my eyes, whether or not
it proved a commercial prospect.
How have you been coping in the Covid 19
emergency?
I am well aware of our good fortune. I can
only imagine the desperation of those with young children who are financially
insecure, and are forced to live cooped-up in a high-rise block!
I have always been pretty self-reliant and
self-sufficient. In the current bizarre
situation, it probably helps that I don’t have grandchildren and not many close
friends. All the people I am most deeply attached to live several hours drive
away, so at the best of times, we don’t meet-up that often. Living in
London, my son and his wife are hyper aware of hygiene, and are probably the
most unlikely people to catch the virus. I’d love to see them, of course,
and also my best friend and my brother and sister and their partners, but life
is what it is. I don’t spend time
fretting about what I can’t do. I just
get on with what is possible.
Do you have strongly held spiritual beliefs?
I am fairly fatalistic about life. My
accident is a case in point. Had the van been travelling faster, had I not been
a fairly resilient, strong-boned individual, had the police car not been
cruising the area, who knows? I have a code I live by which could broadly be
described as Christian, but I am more political than religious. I don’t take my
skepticism about the super-natural as far as Richard Dawkins. His certainty about the materiality of life
annoys me, as his position discounts many people’s mystical and paranormal
experiences. My own experience and that of members of my family, leads me to
the sense (I wouldn’t put it as strongly as belief) that there is more to life
than meets the eye.
Have you achieved what you wanted to
achieve in life?
The trouble with ambitions is that they are
either unreached or if they are, you don’t notice and fix your sights on
something further off in the distance.
As a child I wanted to be rich and
famous. As art was the career I seemed
to be heading for, a famous artist was the goal.
I then decided I wanted to go out with and
ultimately marry a pop star. Every girl
at school would envy me. The fame would come vicariously. Or I could be a famous fashion model. I was forever pulling ‘the face’ in mirrors,
and wishing other people would see what I could see. Any flaws could be overcome
by dieting, a growth spurt and good lighting.
When I decided to try my hand at writing
seriously, the ambition was to be published.
That happened so quickly that my ambition instantly changed to becoming
a bestseller and going on chat shows.
I have reached a point in life where
becoming famous would be a nuisance. I certainly don’t crave ‘things’; I am
proud of re-using, up-cycling, and making-do and mending. I have garments in my wardrobe that go back
to my twenties!
Now, I just want people to read my
books.
Oh, I’ve just had a thought. A
major movie deal would be nice.
BURIED TREASURE
Find Gilli’s other books TORN, LIFE CLASS and FLY or FALL at
Contact Gilli at
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