Showing posts with label Helena Duggan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helena Duggan. Show all posts

Helena Duggan & the specs that inspired a novel


Helena Duggan is a writer from Kilkenny, a medieval, haunted city in the south of Ireland.  A Place Called Perfect is her first book. I met Helena many years ago on a writing course. Our group got on so well, that we still meet regularly and hound each other to keep writing:) 
  
Hi Helena! What inspired you to write A Place Called Perfect?
the original glasses!
I always wanted a pair of round rimmed glasses. Most people think when I tell them that I must’ve loved John Lennon or Harry Potter, and while Harry Potter is definitely on my list of favorite people - neither is the reason for my love of round specs. It was actually James Joyce who sparked my interest. I’d love to say I'd admired Joyce’s work from an early age, but truth be told, I didn’t know who he was outside of the fact that he was a man in a painting my mother owned and he wore the coolest glasses. Years later I saw a similar pair in an antique shop in Australia and I bought them convinced I would change the lenses and wear them myself. That never happened. The more I carried the glasses the more I began to think about their last owner. I wondered if he or she were dead and surmised they were as I the glasses were antique. I began to think about that person and their life. Maybe their memories had become locked inside the lenses and if I got rid of them - I’d be throwing away the last pieces of that person. This idea set me on the path to Perfect.


Perfect is a fascinating place, is it based on anywhere in particular? What was it like creating a world?

It’s based on Kilkenny. I hadn’t started out basing it here, it just kind of happened organically. I needed a family name and I chose Archer. It’s prominent in Kilkenny’s history, and it lent itself to both good and evil characters. Then I needed a place where part of the town could be hidden inside the other part without anyone noticing. Kilkenny’s High street sits above Kieran’s Street and its stone walls. I began to play with the idea of extending few walls here and there and locking Kieran Street inside the rest of the Town. This worked well as did the underground passages, cobbled roads and medieval graveyards of Kilkenny and slowly Perfect began to take shape. It was never a concise decision just something that happened really and I wasn’t aware that I was creating a world until it was created, otherwise I’m not sure I’d be able to do it ;)

And, last question Helena! Who is your favorite writer?
I love Roald Dahl, I read his books loads when I was younger and loved his language and how he made up his own words. Most of what I remember while reading his books is laughter. I think I laughed a lot and that feeling has stuck with me. I also really love JK Rowling's Harry Potter books. I haven’t read any of her other works. I think Harry Potter has stuck with me because she created a totally believable story right from the beginning, none of the seven books feel contrived and the whole idea which was huge has very few plot holes. Her world feels real to me!





About A Place Called Perfect… Who wants to live in a town where everyone has to wear glasses to stop them going blind? And who wants to be neat and tidy and perfectly behaved all the time?
But Violet quickly discovers there's something weird going on – she keeps hearing noises in the night, her mum is acting strange and her dad has disappeared.
When she meets Boy she realizes that her dad is not the only person to have been stolen away...and that the mysterious Watchers are guarding a perfectly creepy secret!

You can buy your copy HERE  at Amazon - or all good bookshops

Graces And Blessings



Today I'm talking with Celine Mescall about her book, Graces and Blessings From Ireland, which by the way is being launched on Friday 21st in Langtons of Kilkenny by Suzanne Power. So, first off, congratulations Celine on a beautifully produced book, can you tell me how it all began - when did you decide to write Graces and Blessings, and why?  
Thank you for those lovely comments Niamh.  I can't remember exactly when I wrote the first blessing but I had been "thinking" them for a long time. As children we heard our parents thank God for most things in life and it was natural for me to follow suit. However I must have been in my twenties or thirties before I gave serious consideration to God and to Goodness and the miracle of Nature. Then I began to thank God and the Universe in earnest and writing my thanks was the next step.
When my friend Sheila gave me a gift of a notebook with a beautiful tapestry cover it was the perfect time to transfer my scribbles from scraps of paper and backs of envelopes on to pristine white sheets. I had over fifty written in the notebook before the idea for the book began to form in my mind.

 What would you like people to get from the book?   
    We are all so busy these days running around and trying to keep up with life, I would love us to take a few moments of stillness to appreciate life and give thanks for it. If I may give you a couple of examples; this morning when I opened the polytunnel I was struck by a green aroma! Difficult to describe but it was the smell of growth and new life emerging. I couldn't help but fill my lungs with it and give thanks for it and on Monday when I was held up in traffic I had time to look at the clouds in the sky. I can never remember the names of cloud formations but they were so lovely I thanked God for them.

The blessings pay a real tribute to the small but essential elements in life, you say in your introduction that saying grace doesn’t have to be formal or even serious, some of the blessings are gently humorous, one of my favourite is the one for Apples -
For me, plucking an apple from the tree and biting into its cool,
crisp freshness is a truly spiritual experience.

I understand where Eve was coming from.
Amen

Niamh, I do think the beauty and the grace is in the small stuff like biting into an apple or popping open a pea pod and if it brings a smile to your face the all the better. I" think" grace far more often than I say it aloud but I can, occasionally, be heard welcoming new shoots of flowers and vegetables first thing in the morning and blessing their arrival!

You have an eye for detail and your writing is beautiful, do you like poetry, do you write poetry?
 I wrote my first poem just over a year ago and it came to me in a flash while I was walking in the woods, it was a magical experience and I couldn't wait to get home and write it down. I have always loved poetry and keep some favourites by my bed for dipping in and out of. There is a collection by the late Bonnie Quinn Cotter called "Woman with Altitude" which I love and I was recently given a gift of "ten poems to change your life" compiled by Roger Housden, Mary Oliver is in there along with Derek Walcott and Pablo Neruda. 

I've just come to the end of a creative writing course with Suzanne Power and John McKenna. John introduced me to a number of poets and his own recent collection "Where sadness Begins" is filled with humanity and pain and nostalgia. My favourite one is "The Last Day of April" which rings bells for me.

So Celine, where can people buy Graces and Blessings?
  “Graces and Blessings from Ireland" is available in Bridie's shop, Johns Street, Kilkenny and also in the restaurant in Kilkenny Castle. I am researching other outlets at the moment but the book is available directly from gracesandblessings@gmail.com

And finally, what is next for you Celine in terms of writing?
That is the big question Niamh, getting a book ready for publication takes time. Helena Duggan who illustrated and designed the book and myself had great fun on the project but now it’s time to start writing again. I would love to be inspired once again to write a poem and I will leave myself open for that. In the meantime there are some experiences from my life in Brazil which I want to commit to paper as well as the thirty or so more graces and blessings which haven't been included in this book.

I really hope you get your Brazil stories collected Celine, and thanks so much for coming over to answer questions on the eve of your first book launch, you may think up some blessings for writers on occasions like these next :)

The Next Big Thing

Jean Harlow
 I was tagged to join in The Next Big Thing, by the fabulous  Nuala Ni Chonchuir over at  Women Rule Writer.

The Next Big Thing consists of a series of questions about the writter/bloggers next project. I had considered writing about a novel I've just begun but its at far too early a stage to be scutinised! So here goes...


 What is the working title of your book?

The first draft was called, melodramatically, The Devil Wore White. (Don't laugh.) The following drafts were worked on as The Herbalist, which stuck.

Where did the idea come from for the book?
It goes back a long way. When I was eighteen I worked for a summer indexing newspaper articles from the late 1930s and early 1940s. One day I came across a report that stuck in my mind - the article in question, which was only three sentences or so long, referred to an Indian Herbalist who had been arrested for offences against girls. I made a note of it and got on with my life.Twenty years later, I began to write short stories. An Indian herbalist walked into one of the first, held a glass bottle up to the light and smiled. 

I wrote many other stories, none to do with him, but he kept appearing. Then other voices began to speak and they were all talking about the same person, the herbalist -some called him a scoundrel, some a saviour. Each was a woman and each whispered a different version of a similar tale. So I gave in and decided to write it all down.

Though inspired by a real person in a real article, I wanted to write fiction so did no research before I began the first draft. I set it in 1939 and just started writing. I wrote in the mornings, giving no thought to plot, structure, beginnings or endings. I wrote fast though I didn't know it at the time, as I had nothing to compare my output with. I never showed the work to anyone. I averaged 1,000 words a day for the first week and then upped it to 2,000 words a day - I stopped when I felt done - at around 80, 000 words.  That was 2009 - I printed it out, put it in a shoe box and labelled it The Devil Wore White. In 6 weeks I was going to go back to work on it. That was the plan. Unfortunately or fortunately, I got caught up in writing another novel called Ghost Estate. That shoebox stayed shut for two years.

Then I heard about The Irish Writers Centres Novel Fair. I decided to enter The Herbalist. Reading it after so long was a strange experience. I had no recollection of some of the scenes or even some of the twists and turns. There was lots of work to be done. But I made the Novel Fair deadline and became a finalist and got to go to the fair. Ger Nichols was the first person I met that morning, and one of the nicest. She became my agent a week later.

What genre does your book fall under?
A damn good read.

Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition?
John Malkovich
Perhaps John Malkovich for the Herbalist. And I would love Brenda Fricker for the part of Aggie, a prostitute who lives on the river. As for Emily, Carmel and Sarah it would be great if talented unknowns got their hands on such strong female roles. If we could time travel I'd hire Jean Harlow to play the beautiful Rose.
Brenda Fricker


What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?

A man appears one day in a market square, sets himself up as a herbalist and changes the lives of four women for ever.

How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?

June, July and August 2009 as far as I can recall.

What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?

I avoided anything that seemed similar when I wrote it and since. I couldn't say.

Who or what inspired you to write this book?
The characters wouldn't leave me alone.

What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest?

Good people doing bad things and bad people having a rare old time?

When and how will it be published?
It will be published by Penguin Ireland in  June 2013. It will be launched in my home town of Athy, and all are welcome:)

I'd like to tag Alison Wells and Helena Duggan for next wednesdays, Next Big Thing!


A Place Called Perfect

 
 
 
 
I'll be chatting to talented Helena Duggan soon about her debut novel, but in the meantime, here's a little more about her wonderful debut-   A Place Called Perfect ...
 
 
Take a journey into Perfect, a town that is anything but...

Violet Brown didn’t want to live in a place that was perfect. How would she ever survive? She’d have to be neat and tidy, would definitely have to brush her hair. She’d have to be perfect and that was boring.

But when her Dad is offered the best job an optician can get, to fix a strange problem in this odd little town, Violet has to obey. That’s the thing with parents, they only ever did what they wanted!

From the beginning Violet hates her new home, it’s too clean, the people are too friendly, everything is just too nice...

When her Mam begins to act a little strange, her Dad disappears on a mysterious business trip without telling a soul, she almost gets expelled from school for picking up a pencil without permission and starts hearing voices in her head, Violet thinks she’s going mad.

Until one day she meets BOY... 
 
 

About the Author

Helena Duggan is a writer and graphic designer living in Kilkenny, Ireland. If you have any questions about Boy or Violet or anything in the whole world, please contact her. She loves talking, never really shuts up actually! These are her websites Helddesign.ie (that’s for all her design work) Helenaduggan.com (that’s for all her writing stuff)

`A Load of Rubbish` hits Harper Collins Editors Desk




A LOAD OF RUBBISH

Congratulations to my creative writing classmate Helena Duggan http://helddesign.blogspot.com/ whose novel for children, "A load of Rubbish" has reached the editors desk at the Harper Collins site Authonomy. http://www.authonomy.com/ Their stated aim is to "flush out the brightest, freshest new writing talent around". I'm delighted for Helena, her novel is fantastic.


SEAN O FAOLAIN SHORT STORY COMP
The Seán Ó Faoláin Short Story Competition is now open for submissions -

The judge for 2010 is Short Review founder and editor Tania Hershman and she blogs at TaniaWrites http://www.titaniawrites.blogspot.com/.

SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
unpublished short stories of 3,000 words or less.


Judging for this competition is ANONYMOUS. The entrant's name and contact details must be on a separate piece of paper.


Each entry must be accompanied by an entry fee of €15, US $20 or £15.


Closing date is 31st July 2010.


Entries must be sent to The Seán Ó Faoláin Short Story Competition, The Munster Literature Centre, Frank O'Connor House, 84 Douglas Street, Cork, Ireland



BOYNE BERRIES 7

Boyne Berries 7 was launched last week in Trim. There was a big turn out and twenty contributers read, I was delighted to have my prose piece, Lady Slice published in this edition of the magazine. I was really struck by Aideen Henry's prose piece and how she read. There's a lot of variety in this issue, extracts can be read at http://www.boynewriters.com/mag

The Stinging Fly Summer Issue

 So, I have work in this beauty! "We Can't Have Artists Losing Their Tempers" is a short story featuring Brigid, a 93 year old...