Monday, 24 December 2012

Advent Heroine - Babushka

For Xmas Eve, a special heroine - Babushka - from the old Russian Christmas story. Babushka was too busy to heed the call to follow the new born King, the Christ child, as she had housework to do. When at last she's finished, she gathers up the toys in her cupboard (she had a baby who had died) and follows him but never quite catches up. As she goes on her way each Xmas Eve, she leaves a toy for every child on her way to find the Baby Jesus.

    Merry Christmas to all our Pocketeers - both writers and readers - and best wishes for a Happy and Successful New Year 2013.






 

Sunday, 23 December 2012

Advent Heroine Amy Johnson

The most famous of all female flyers.

In 1930 she flew solo to Australia in a Gypsy Moth and was awarded the CBE in the King's Birthday Honors. She married Jim Mollison and together they flew to the USA hoping to complete the journey without a break. 55 miles short of their destination they were forced to crash land when they ran out of fuel. They were awarded with a ticker tape parade along New York's Broadway.

The marriage broke up and after the outbreak of war Amy became a pilot in the women's section of the Air Transport Auxiliary, flying vital machines and men to various destinations.

On 5 January 1941 Amy disappeared, believed drowned, when her plane crashed into the Thames Estuary. No trace of her body has ever been found.

New Book Promo

Hi Everyone,

My latest book is free today on Amazon.
'Getting a Life' is a contemporary romance ... Joanne books an escort to take her to a college formal staff party. Trouble is, he turns out to be one of her students!
Enjoy!
Love Chrissie
Hi Everyone,
My latest book is having a free day!
'Getting a Life' is free on Amazon for today only.
Hope you enjoy it!
Love Chrissie

Saturday, 22 December 2012

Advent heroine - Eve



Audience participation is required with this one! Let’s consider the role of ‘mother’ as a heroine and start from the beginning with Eve. Some people believe we all came from one mother. Poor old Eve had no mother or father; she was fashioned from her husband’s rib from whence comes the name ‘woman’. Having succumbed to temptation, she was punished with the physical agony of childbirth and sentenced to being under the power of her husband. She had three children: Cain, Abel and Seth and is known as ‘the mother of all the living’.


The accomplishments of most mothers are numerous and often tend to be overlooked or taken for granted. Not all people will regard their mother as heroic and the empty photo frame is for you to imagine your own picture of ‘mother’. It might be your own mum, yourself, or a fantasy one. It could even be Eve.

Friday, 21 December 2012


BOUDICCA

It is difficult to imagine a more fearsome woman than Boudicca, Queen of the Iceni people. Dio Cassius wrote: ‘She was huge of frame, terrifying of aspect, and with a harsh voice. A great mass of bright red hair fell to her knees.’ Not exactly your usual romantic heroine, but she put together an army and almost sent the Romans packing. To her followers she was the personification of a goddess, which may explain the variety of Celtic tribes who united so passionately behind her.

 
When her husband  Prasutagus died, he left half his estate to his wife and daughters and half to the Emperor Nero, as was expected at that time. But a few days after his death an administrator was sent to seize his total belongings and retrieve his debts. Unable to pay, Boudicca was publicly flogged and her daughters raped in front of her by Roman soldiers.

Perhaps it was grief that drove her, or perhaps revenge, but it is said that she raised an army of 100,000 warriors made up of her Iceni tribe and various other Celtic tribes. They burned and pillaged their way from Camulodunum (Colchester) to Londinium (London) and by the time she reached Verulamium (St Albans) her army was 200,000 strong. She was eventually subdued by Paullinus and, rather than face defeat, the proud warrior Queen and her daughters took their own lives by drinking poison.

What a wonderful plot this story has. Maybe a bit strong for a Pocket Novel, but otherwise it has everything. Love, romance, excitement, danger and tragedy. Boudicca has been written about many times, and the wonderful Alex Kingston with her bright red hair played the Queen in the 2003 film, but Boudicca’s story still has the power to inspire women everywhere.

I live in Colchester, so Boudicca is part of my heritage. Her picture is a stained glass window in our town hall. The town is still enclosed within a Roman wall, and part of Colchester’s Norman Castle is built on the foundations of the Temple of Claudius where Boudicca fought her famous battle with the Romans.

Like any other real heroine, she will always be remembered.

Thursday, 20 December 2012

Advent Heroines Number 20 The Duchess of Cambridge

There are some heroines who come in blazing, fighting, triumphant, energetic, spikey. There are others who win the day through sheer quiet determination. Kate Middleton is one of those. The recent history of the Royal family has been a troubled one. Like a tv soap opera, the lives of the Windsors has played out with drama - some cringe-making mistakes, some tearjerking tragedies have beset them in recent decades. At some points, the present Queen's long reign threatened to look more like an episode of Eastenders than the sedate, regal progress it should have. Kate Middleton had a lot to live up to when she decided to marry into 'the firm'. She would inevitably be compared to her absent mother-in-law and the press, given half the chance, would have a field day with her.

But she has proven to be made of stronger stuff. With a rock solid family behind her, she has in a very short time built a significant following. Quietly glamorous, appealing to young and old, she helped to make the Queen's Jubilee year a great one for the Royal family, helping to turn their fortunes around and strengthen their brand. With a baby on the way, she has fulfilled everything expected of her and more. A thoroughly modern heroine with very traditional values, she has put the first family in the land firmly back on track. They are indeed lucky to have her.

Cara

Wednesday, 19 December 2012

Advent Heroine Day 19 - Ellen Ripley and the changing nature of Heroines



My advent heroine today is Ellen Ripley, the heroine of the Alien franchise, as played by Sigourney Weaver. Before Alien, women were generally treated as baggage in a story; to be carried around and cared for by the hunky hero. In romances, that role was played up the nth degree as breathless damsels waited for a man to save them from their lives of drudgery.

So when I first watched Alien, I expected that Dallas, as played by Tom Skerrit, would be the one to save the day. I don’t think I was the only one.

That it turned out to be Ripley, gave us a character who broke all the boundaries around portraying women as strong characters who were not a slave to their emotions. As a contrast, Lambert, played by Veronica Cartwright, was the distressed damsel, screaming her way through the film and generally hampering everyone’s efforts to deal with the alien.

Ripley was good at her job and able to make the tough decisions, even if those decisions, such as not letting an infected crew member back into the ship, were not popular. So she wasn’t necessarily likeable to begin with, but that was because she was a woman taking decisions that would have been acceptable from a man.

But she was also a nurturer. She ‘adopted’ the little girl Newt, not long after being told that her own daughter had died whilst Ripley was in hypersleep. Later she took care of the android Call, played by Winona Ryder, though word has it that that relationship was supposed to be a version of the alpha male/beta heroine relationship. But the fact that Ripley had a career, and left a daughter at home whilst she worked on a space ship was, for the first time in fiction, treated as normal. Before, if a female character had been depicting leaving her children behind to have a career, she would have been portrayed as unsympathetic, whereas no one would ever disapprove of a man going off to work for several years and not seeing his family. Never before in film had women been treated as true equals, with no apologies and no questions about whether they were doing the right thing.

Interestingly when the script of Alien was written, all the characters were known by their surname. Only when it came to casting were the characters assigned genders. I’m sure that helped in making sure that Ripley did not have to live up to the female stereotype. And it’s just as likely that the other female in the story, Cartwright, could have been played by a man. That would really have tested the boundaries of gender, to have a man playing the weaker role.  

Admittedly Alien is not a romance, but I believe it did pave the way for women to have more equality in all types of fiction. Romantic heroines were at last allowed to be proactive instead of reactive. They didn’t have to sit around waiting for men to save them, and they could even be the one to save the man.

I think characters like Ellen Ripley helped all writers to realise their female characters as whole people, and not just as prospective or actual mothers and damsels in distress.

Tuesday, 18 December 2012

Advent Heroine - Grace Darling

The most famous of all lighthouse keeper's daughters.

In September 1838 when the SS Forfarshire floundered on Hardcar Rocks near Longstone lighthouse, 22 year old Gace helped her father rescue the survivors by rowing their boat out to the rocks in treacherous conditions. Grace was left alone in the boat trying to control it against the vicious storms while her father checked on the survivors clinging to the rocks.

The daring rescue caught the public interest and Grace received £50 from Queen Victoria. She was also awarded a silver medal from the Royal Humane Society and a medal for gallantry from the National Insitution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck (now the RNLI).

Grace died four years later at the age of 26 from TB.

Monday, 17 December 2012

Advent Heroine - Princess Leia Organa

Princess Leia Organa "STAR WARS"

"A long time ago in a galaxy far far away ..." and its accompanying haunting music must be etched in most people's minds forever. The heroine of Parts 4, 5 & 6 of the epic science fiction movie series, STAR WARS, Princess Leia Organa, an iconic fictional movie heroine determined to save her galaxy from Darth Vader and his planet-destroying Death Star.
We first see her as only a holographic image through a robot, sending out her message seeking help because she has been taken hostage by the enemy. Cute little R2-D2 escapes of course and is found and its message retrieved by farmboy Luke Skywalker who sure knows how to fly a plane, becomes a Jedi Knight and fights alongside the Princess with smuggler Hans Solo and a cast of colourful characters and allies.
Together they all fight the most evil of evils, Leia pitching in among them and handy with a gun, the rebellion leader, always determined to save her people and in the centre of all the action.
The galaxy is saved in the end, of course, with Luke's pivotal and famous fighter run down the trench to destroy the Death Star.
A heroine and her memorable story who is already legend in movie history.

Sunday, 16 December 2012

Advent Heroine

I’m being greedy today and posting two heroines. I couldn’t decide which, so posting about both of them.

Dame Maggie Smith is so dry in her humour that she always makes me laugh. I suspect she is probably quite similar to her many characters, the most recent being Violet Crawley in ‘Downton Abbey’. I know the programme has its critics but for me it was a highlight of television.

She often fights for films to be made ‘for grown-ups’ instead of the constant pandering to the young. There have been rather fewer of these but many of them have been highly successful.

Her critically acclaimed films include Othello (1965), The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1969), Travels with My Aunt (1972), California Suite (1978), Clash of the Titans (1981), A Room with a View (1985) and Gosford Park (2001). She has also appeared in a number of widely popular films, including Hook (1991), Sister Act (1992) and as Professor Minerva McGonagall in the Harry Potter film series

I loved seeing her in ‘Ladies in Lavender’ too, along with my other heroine for today.

Dame Judy Dench another Dame from the world of acting. Her list of highlights is endless, including "M" for recent James Bond movies, lots of roles on television from high drama to comedy. I loved the "Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" (with Maggie Smith again). It was great fun and most entertaining. Judi Dench has received many award nominations for her acting in theatre, film and television; her awards include eleven BAFTAs, (including the Bafta Fellowship in 2001) seven Laurence Olivier Awards, (including the Society's Special Award) two Screen Actors Guild Awards, two Golden Globes, an Academy Award, and a Tony Award. In June 2011, she received a fellowship from the British Film Institute (BFI).[3] She was married to actor Michael Williams from 1971 until his death in 2001.


Long may they reign!

Saturday, 15 December 2012

Advent Heroine - Isabella Bird

Isabella Bird was born in 1831 and until she was 40 lived a 'normal' life, staying at home to care for family members as expected of a female of that era. She would probably have stayed there and been unknown had not doctors prescribed travel to cure her bad back and insomnia. For the next thirty years she travelled widely across the globe from Tibet to Japan to the American Rocky Mountains. She had many scary moments as a single woman travelling but it didn't seem to put her off. Her diaries and letters offer an insight into her travels. She really was quite extraordinary.


Friday, 14 December 2012

Advent Heroine - Gladys Aylward

We've all seen Ingrid Bergman in Inn of the Sixth Happiness but the real life Gladys Aylward was nothing like her. She was small in build and had a London accent. She didn't like the film and insisted it was nothing like her real life.

When she was 28 she took the decision to travel overland to China to work with missionary Jeannie Lawsojn in Yangchen, after failing her examination at the Mission Centre in London. When Mrs Lawson died Gladys took on the challenge of running the mission.

She was responsible for quelling a prison riot; helping to end the practice of foot binding of females; taking in abandoned babies and of course the famous twelve day walk with 100 children through harsh terrain to the Government orphanage at Sian.

She returned to England for health reasons and when she was refused permission by the Communist Government to return to China she settled in Taiwan and founded an orphanage in her own name. She worked until her death in 1970.

Thursday, 13 December 2012

Frozen Heart - Pocket Novel out this week

Just to let you know that my Christmas pocket novel 'Frozen Heart' is on sale this week in newsagents and shops. It's based on the Cinderella theme. I hope you enjoy it. Merry Xmas!


Advent Heroine - White Vision


Thousands of pigeons were used in World War II to carry messages in either special containers on their legs or small pouches looped over their backs. Pigeons were dropped by parachute to Resistance workers in France, Belgium and Holland.
Having flown 60 miles over heavy seas with poor visibility and against a headwind of 25 miles an hour, White Vision arrived at her loft with a message giving the position of a ditched aircraft. As a result, the aircraft was found and the crew rescued.
She was awarded the Dickin Medal, popularly called the animal VC, for ‘delivering a message under exceptionally difficult conditions and so contributing to the rescue of an air crew while serving with the RAF in October 1943’.
We could start a debate about the use of animals in war, but instead will simply marvel at, and raise our glasses to, all heroic animals including search and rescue dogs in disaster areas, animals used as pets for therapy and the many pigeons deployed during wars.

Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Advent Heroine - Jane Austen

Jane Austen is a heroine of mine not only for her amazing books but also because she was a writer when gently bred women were expected to remain at home and raise children. People can't understand the fascination she has for Janeites - they often say things like ;"She's been dead for over two hundred years." and "She wrote about upper class idiots looking for husbands -who were also upper class and idiots." It is impossible to explain how reading about her interesting, complex and often irritating characters is a pleasure -and when they eventually sort themselves out and get their happy ending -I share it with them. Her world of balls, house parties, rides in an open carriage, beautiful gowns and handsome young men is perfect escapism. So often when reading, or watching one of the many excellent film adaptations, I think - that person is so real -just like me or someone I know. Good writing lasts for ever.
I have written my own homage to the great Jane Austen - Miss Bennet & Mr Bingley. Happy Christmas Fenella J Miller

Tuesday, 11 December 2012

A Christmas Moon out today - your chance to win copies


My first full length paranormal romance is out today. A Christmas Moon was originally written as a pocket novel but unfortunately was not quite suitable for the market. So I was delighted when Siren Bookstrand accepted it.

At the moment the book is only available from the Bookstrand website. It should be on Amazon in about 4-6 weeks time.

Visit my blog for details on how you can win a copy of the ebook.

Advent Heroine - Bathsheba Everdene

How could this heroine be anything but memorable with an amazing name like Bathsheba? 'Far From the Madding Crowd' by Thomas Hardy is one of my all-time favourite books and films. With a quiet but memorable start you know this is a book where characterisation will reign supreme - the heroine is espied by shepherd Gabriel Oak riding down a Dorsetshire lane. Unobserved, she takes out a mirror and preens herself leading Gabriel to describe her later as having one fault - that of vanity. But Bathsheba has enough qualities, beauty being just one, to be courted by three extraordinary characters. Gabriel the solid, ultra-reliable charmer, Sargeant Troy the dashing, selfish soldier and wealthy Farmer Boldwood the lonely, obsessive widower. Bathsheba was extraordinary for her time in being a strong, independent business woman. A landowner who makes her inherited farm a success, an employer who hires and fires, a woman who takes her own decisions about who she will and will not marry. True she makes myriad mistakes along her path to a happy ending, the worst being falling for love-rat Troy. At one point, married to Bathsheba but always in love with Fanny Robin who perishes due to his neglect Troy tells Bathsheba, "this woman is more to me, dead as she is, than ever you were, or are, or can be." Boy, I wish I'd written that line! If you want to read a truly wonderful romance with an extraordinary heroine, this book is for you.

Monday, 10 December 2012

Advent Heroine - Lara Croft

Lara Croft, played by Angelina Jolie in the film version, is very much a modern day heroine. She faces danger at every turn, competes with men on equal terms, but never loses her femininity.

No one could be more feminine than Angelina Jolie, and the Lara Croft of the Tomb Raider games is every man's dream woman, right down to her double-D bra and tiny shorts. However, it is very muich a case of look but don't touch. Not without permission, anyway. Lara Croft has guns, two of them, which probably helps, but women have an arsenal every bit as lethal as a couple of guns, and we can twist most men round our little finger.

As writers of romance and romantic suspense, this is something we have to bear in mind when we create our own heroine. Somehow we have to make her strong and independent but still feminine. She must never be a victim but, equally, she should never try to behave like a man. We don't need to compete to win the fight; we just have to be ourselves.

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Margaret and Sally on the RNA blog

 

Pocketeers Margaret Mounsden and Sally Quilford both get a mention on the Romantic Novelists Association blog about their new releases out in December.

Margaret's is the large print edition of her pocket novel, Second Time Around, released on 1st December and Sally's is her first paranormal romance novel, A Christmas Moon, released on 12th December.

Advent Heroine - Mother Teresa

After she took her religious vows Agnes Gonsche Bojaxhiu chose the name Teresa after the French saint Teresa. She then received permission from her supervisor to leave her convent and go to work with the poor of Calcutta. At times she was forced to beg but what began as a small group of volunteers eventually became a worldwide centre caring for the refugees and outcasts of every nature.

When she was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1979 for her work amongst the poor the funds were giving to help the poor. She insisted she did not need earthly rewards.

In 1983 her health declined and she suffered a heart attack followed by a secon in 1989, necessitating the insertion of a pacemaker. In 1996 she suffered a fall and a bout of malaria further weakened her health.

She died on 5 September 1977 aged 86, mourned by the world and leavikng a legacy of hospices and orphanages throughout the world.

Saturday, 8 December 2012

Advent Heroine, Day 8


Ashley Judd, Actress & Humanitarian

Ashley Judd came to mind for my choice of advent heroine when I was trying to think of a woman who I thought particularly heroic. She played the lead role of Libby in the movie Double Jeopardy alongside the wonderful Tommy Lee Jones who was the perfect complementary character for her in the film.

The movie is about a woman framed for her husband's murder but she discovers he is still alive. As she has already been tried for the crime, she cannot be re-prosecuted if she finds and kills him. Of course, said husband is a real nasty and over the course of a fast and action-packed movie, there is nothing that Libby won't do to seek justice and reclaim her son after her years of imprisonment.

Ashley also starred earlier this year in the TV series Missing. Again, familiar scenario. Her character, Rebecca Winstone, has a teenage son who goes missing under suspicious circumstances while on holidays in Europe. Rebecca and her husband were CIA agents and use their knowledge and skills to trace him. Again, the mother tiger comes out and she will do whatever it takes to find him. Lots of twists and fast action over the course of the series.

In her personal life, it seems Ashley is opting out of acting to become a genuine dedicated humanitarian and supports many worthy causes. Her ancestors sailed on the Mayflower, she is the daughter and sister of country music royalty, is married and lives in Tennessee and Scotland. Her autobiography, All That Is Bitter And Sweet, looks wonderful, and is drawn from her diaries kept while visiting grass roots programes in 13 countries [and counting]. Her website gives much more information about the person, and her life and work.


Friday, 7 December 2012

Janes Eyre


From a harsh childhood controlled by unfeeling adults, Jane Eyre has to rely on her own courage and convictions to make her way in the world. She longs to learn. She dares to dream. Employed as a governess, she travels across the bleak Yorkshire moors to the mysterious Thornfield Hall – a house of locked doors with a dangerous secret.

There she meets the strange, sardonic and intriguing Mr Rochester.

Can the constraints of society and the dark past be overcome? Should Jane trust her head or follow her heart?

I've always loved this story ... it has everything in it for me. I know lots of people don't like it but it races through giving satisfaction right at the end. I hope some people share my views!

Thursday, 6 December 2012

Advent Heroine Day Six - Mary Anning


I've chosen Mary Anning for my advent heroine. She had a life that would make a perfect historical saga full of adventure. She also demonstrates the kind of historical heroine we, as writers, should be trying to create. A woman of her time and yet with characteristics such as courage, determination and intelligence that readers today can identify with and root for throughout the story.


Mary was born into extreme poverty in Dorset in the 1800s. She and her brother were the only survivors out of ten children born into the family. She was once struck by lightning which killed her sister. Despite having a very low level of education, Mary taught herself to read and became knowledgeable in the fields of geology and paleontology.

To supplement the family's meagre income, she became a fossil hunter along the beaches at Lyme Regis and gradually made scientific discoveries especially marine reptiles. Eminent scientists of the day visited her and also the fashionable crowd. She died aged only 47 but had lived an amazing life.


Wednesday, 5 December 2012

Advent Heroine -Day Five Florence Nightingale

I have chosen Florence Nightingale as my advent heroine. Her work in the Crimea is now thought to have been far less heroic than was reported in the papers at the time. The country had need of a heroine and Florence Nightingale's role was exaggerated to satisfy this need. I selected her because of what she did after she returned from the Crimea. she founded the first professional nursing school in the world at St Thomas's Hospital in London. Her social reforms included improving healthcare for everyone in British society as well as recommending more hunger relief in India. she also was instrumental in the abolition of laws relating to prostitution that were particularly hard on women. She also encourage the expansion of women in the workforce. Florence was also a writer – although her work was not fictional but related to the dissemination of medical knowledge. She also wrote extensively about religion and mysticism. She came from a wealthy upper-class family and was expected to marry well and raise children however her face led her to spend her life serving others. Although she suffered from chronic alehouse continued working until her death at the age of 90. A true advent heroine. Hope the snow is not too deep where you are. Fenella J Miller

Tuesday, 4 December 2012

Advent Heroines Day Four




At the festive season, it seems only appropriate that we acknowledge the Pantomime Dame who, although traditionally a man, brings laughter to us all and brightens our lives J
Although often regarded as a merely humorous form of entertainment over the Christmas period,  Pantomime incorporates the vital ingredients of good battling evil and emerging triumphant. To this end, the Dame plays an important part not only in engaging audience participation with slapstick routines and trickery towards fellow performers, but also in making us laugh at their outfits and hairdos which are outrageous. They have a bawdy sense of humour and are extrovert characters.
 
 

 

Monday, 3 December 2012

Advent Heroines Day Three


My first advent heroine is the incomparable Dame Agatha Christie. As a writer of romantic suspense, I've studied her books closely to try to find out what it is that makes them so good. Yes, I know Agatha was a crime writer, but there was often a bit of romantic intrigue at the centre of her novels (and she did write romantic novels as Mary Westmacott), such as The Man In The Brown Suit, and the Tommy and Tuppence novels. At least two of my novellas, My True Companion and A Collector of Hearts, are inspired by Agatha's work, and my town of Midchester is not so different from St. Mary Mead, though I have set my stories in Midchester in modern times as well as historical.

One thing reading Agatha's work teaches me personally is how to write easy prose that drives the story along. As I'm sure any of my fellow Pocketeers can verify, easy reading is hard writing. It's not at all easy to write prose that is simple, but effective. Agatha Christie was the mistress of the technique and there was a study done once on why her work was so popular. It was because she used phrases that people instantly recognised (scroll down to where it says 'Her language and The Agatha Christie code). That is why her books sold so many, along with the fact that as a writer she was innovative and not afraid to take chances, as The Murder of Roger Ackroyd shows. So I strive to make my stories move along at a similar pace, in the hopes that the reader will just keep turning the pages.

Christie was something of a mystery woman herself. When her husband, Archie Christie, said he was leaving her for another woman, she disappeared for 11 days, and turned up in a Harrogate hotel, where she was using the surname of her husband's mistress (Neele). No one ever knew why she did it, though it's been suggested that she just wanted to embarrass her husband. Either way, I love that this wonderful writer of mysteries created her own mystery, and never spoke about it.

In a Doctor Who episode, it was suggested that Agatha's novels will be read many millions of years into the future and I doubt anyone would disagree. As I toast my advent heroine, I can only wish mine achieve the same status.

Sunday, 2 December 2012

Advent Heroines Day Two

Day two of our Advent heroines is Snow White. However not the traditional version, instead the version in the latest film Snow White and the Huntsman. I saw this the other day and was impressed by two things. First the special effects, including the magic mirror which morphs into an apparition of liquid glass. Second the fact that the two very strong female leads completely steal the limelight. There is the evil stepmother/queen played by the stunning Charlize Theron. She is thoroughly mean, a character built up in layers with an unhappy backstory of her own to give a reason for her sour hatred. The Snow White character is very definitely a heroine for today while still, at heart, possessing the well-loved traits of traditional fairy tale heroines. Sweet natured but this time with a feisty kick-ass attitude. She is locked up in a tower by the evil queen, gives the huntsman a run for his money and finally, like Joan of Arc riding to battle in armour conquers evil to triumph and save her kingdom on a trusty steed leading an army. She is as far away as you could possibly get from the Disney version but both have their place and show how old tales can have a new twist and be just as compelling. One thing this heroine proves is that as writers, we can mustn't fear taking an old theme, shuffling it about, giving it a different spin and making it work afresh.

Saturday, 1 December 2012

Free Book download

Tomorrow, Sunday 2nd December, feel free to download 'Say it With Flowers'!
Love Chrissie

Advent Heroines

Hi - The Pocketeers have decided to create a special Advent calender devoted to all those inspirational, beautiful, tragic, brave, captivating, love-lorn, stoic, whatever.... heroines. They can be fictional or real, historical or from the present. They are the women who inspire our novels and have qualities that we can point to and say, 'she's heroic.' I find it's always useful when creating a character to look at real life examples for inspiration. So, here goes. For our first heroine I've chosen Kelly Holmes. A girl from a council estate who knew from the age of 14 that she wanted two things. Firstly to join the army, secondly to be an Olympic champion. She's achieved both through sheer hard work and determination. Being awarded an MBE for her work as a sergeant, she has achieved success in a man's world, letting nothing stop her. She now runs a charity to help young disadvantaged women overcome difficulties and triumph. Add to that her gentle beauty, whippet-like figure and glamorous outfits at many award ceremonies and I think she's a fitting heroine for today. I always think back to scriptwriting advisor, Michael Hague's useful advice on creating heroes and heroines. Two of the things he says we can look for is that the person is an expert because we all find people who are excellent at what they do intriguing. Secondly, that they are likeable. I think Dame Kelly scores on both counts. Watch out tomorrow for our second Advent heroine...... Bye for now! Cara