Introducing Laurie Ellingham's latest release, Ours Is The Winter... *GIVEAWAY*



 I'm thrilled to welcome Laurie Ellingham to my blog today and to be a part of her ongoing tour - wishing you much sales and success with OURS IS THE WINTER! Let's start with my questions...

Hi Rachel, thanks for having me on your blog today!

1.)              What was your first job? Did you like or dislike it? Why?

My first job (at fifteen) was working in an old ladies clothing outlet on a Saturday afternoon. Think very big knickers and very long skirts and you’re on the right track. It was pretty boring but I stuck it out for a year so I can’t have hated it. I used to get my pay in a brown envelope at the end of each shift. A whopping £15 woo woo! It wasn’t much but there weren’t many places that would employ a fifteen year old so I was happy. 

2.)              Do you have a pet peeve? If so what is it?

Whistling. I can’t stand the sound of it.

For books, I don’t like reading a back cover blurb and feeling like I know exactly what’s going to happen. If it’s a book with a good tag line then I’ll dive right in without reading the blurb.


3.)              Would you describe your style as shabby chic, timeless elegance, eclectic, country or ___­­­_?

I don’t think I’m stylish enough to have a style. Probably might style is warmth. Stick me in a woolly jumper and slippers and I’m happy. 


4.)              Tell me about your book Ours is the Winter and where you got your inspiration for it?

Ours is the Winter follows Erica, Molly and Noah’s journey across the frozen wilderness of the arctic for a week’s husky sled challenge. They are all hiding things about their lives and see the trip as way to escape, but in gruelling subzero temperatures, it isn’t long before the cracks in their lives start to show.

The inspiration for Ours is the Winter came from the characters themselves. Erica, Molly and Noah are three people who on the outside seem pretty much OK, but each of them is struggling with life. I wanted to throw them together in a place where they couldn’t just walk away or bury their heads in the sand (or snow) and the husky sled challenge seemed like a great way to do this.

There are so many elements to journeying across the arctic and the challenge itself that I really enjoyed writing about. Erica, for instance, hates the cold and is petrified of dogs and yet she has to manage a pack of huskies.

The biggest challenge for me was finding so many ways to describe snow :-)


5.)              Who is your role model? Why?

I don’t have one particular role model. When I read a great book, and when I see my writing friends working hard, I feel inspired and motivated to work harder and smarter, and to push myself out of my comfort zone.

6.)              How much of your book is realistic?

The characters are my own creation but I’ve tried to capture the realism of the sledding experience across the arctic, as well as the little things, like how your hair freezes because it’s so cold. I loved doing the research in this novel and enjoyed meeting some very fluffy (and smelly) huskies. A friend of mine did this trip for charity a few years ago and was a superstar when it came to helping with the research (Thanks Donna).

7.)              What are your ambitions for your writing career?

To keep writing books that challenge me as a writer and that I wake up every day excited to write. As for everything else, I seem to have a habit of moving the goal posts. I feel incredibly fortunate to have signed with an agent earlier this year, which is a big step for me. I still feel at the start of my journey, which is funny really because the women’s fiction writing workshop we met on was way back in 2007 (I still owe you a glass of wine, Rachel :-)).  


8.)              Share one fact about yourself that would surprise people.

I would choose being at home on a Saturday night in my pjs over a night out, which surprises people as I’m outgoing in most aspects of my life, but I prefer being home with my family than anywhere else.


Blurb: 

Journeying across the Arctic, their pasts are about to catch up with them.
Erica, Molly and Noah are embarking on the challenge of a lifetime, driving Siberian huskies across the frozen wilderness of the Arctic. Cut off from the world and their loved ones and thrown together under gruelling conditions, it isn’t long before the cracks start to show.

Erica has it all. A loving husband, a successful career and the most adorable baby daughter. But Erica has been living a double life, and as she nears her fortieth birthday her lies threaten to come crashing down.
Molly was on her way to stardom. But when her brother died, so did her dreams of becoming an Olympic champion. Consumed by rage and grief, she has shut out everyone around her, but now she’s about to learn that comfort can come from the most unexpected places.

Noah has a darkness inside him and is hounded by nightmares from his past. Tortured, trapped and struggling to save his fractured relationship, he knows this journey is not going to help, but try telling his girlfriend that.
As their lives and lies become ever more entwined, it becomes clear that in the frozen wilds there is nowhere to hide.

Ours is the Winter - Extract
A startled scream left Erica’s mouth. It was her last sound before the fear gripped her body and stole her voice. Not that it would have mattered if she could’ve shouted for help. No one would’ve heard her, not even Molly standing two metres away, already on her sled and ready to go.
The huskies, with the exception of the one eyeballing Erica with an I’m-going-to-rip-out-your-throat glare, were all attached to the sled lines, their heads pointed to the sky and a stream of incessant barking filled the air. Every few seconds one of the pack would break from the barking to add a screeching yelp to the noise.
So much for having nothing to do with dogs. So much for ‘they’ll do their thing and I’ll do mine.’ Erica almost laughed at her own naivety. Stupidity more like. But laughing required movement and she was currently frozen to the spot about to be mauled by the biggest dog Erica had ever seen.
The creature was head to toe black and shiny, like the monitors at the studio right before being switched on in the morning. Its dark eyes fixed on Erica’s face as it crouched down, losing its front paws in the snow before barking at Erica. It wasn’t the excited chattering type of barks of the rest of the huskies, but something ferocious – a vicious warning.
A second later the dog launched into the air and flew at Erica. The force of his weight – a furry bus – slammed into her body sending her falling to the ground with the dog on top of her. Erica scrunched her eyes shut as the putrid stench of the dog’s breath hit her senses. Her body tensed as she waited for the pain of its teeth to sink into her skin.
‘Wow, Erica,’ Lee said from somewhere above her. ‘Looks like you’ve made a friend.’
Erica felt the weight of the dog lift from her body and she scrambled to her feet. ‘He … he just turned on me,’ she said with a sudden urge to burst into tears, from the fall, or the fear, or the frustration that she was the only one incapable of handling the dogs. A mix of them all, she guessed.
‘This is Kriger,’ Lee said, holding the dog by the back of his collar with one hand, and stroking its back with his other. ‘Kriger is the Norwegian word for warrior.’
‘He was going to bite me.’ Her voice was high and as screechy as the yelps from the rest of the huskies.
Lee laughed, a bellowing chuckle-like noise. ‘He gives the other dogs the odd nip now and again when they misbehave but he’s never bitten a human yet.’
Yet? Gee, how reassuring.

Links



Author bio: When I'm not running around after my two children, my husband, our Cockerpoo Rodney, or just plain running, I love nothing more than disappearing into the fictional world of my characters preferably with a large coffee and a Twix (or two) to hand.

When I am in the thick of a character crisis, I can often be seen walking around the village with my jumper on inside out and back to front, chatting (and occasionally laughing) away to myself.

I have a first class honours degree in psychology and a background in Public Relations, both of which help in everything I do.

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Giveaway

Prize: 1 signed paperback of Laurie's previous book, “One Endless Summer”.

International

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