"Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read a book by Mark Barry!" (Mary Quallo, St Louis)

"Who in their right mind wouldn't want to read a book by Mark Barry!"  (Mary Quallo, St Louis)
Coming next week - Carla Eatherington
Showing posts with label author interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label author interview. Show all posts

Sunday, 29 March 2015

An American In Britain - fun YA novelist and reviewer, Barb Taub, is...Around The Cauldron!

Today, in the ominous, awe inspiring shadow of the Burj Khalifa, here in downtown Dubai, I meet Barb Taub. YA writer, reviewer, commentator and classic American wit in the Mary Tyler Moore mould. 

Barb now lives and writes in the Green and Pleasant. I met her through the brilliant Rosie Amber’s review site, where she reviewed my novel The Night Porter.  
Whatever grade Barb gave TNP was less important than the stunning quality of the review itself, like a newspaper article, and I swiftly sent the Goblins out to research her.
I discovered she’s a writer (as you will see of Mature YA novels) and very popular in this little corner of our vast and sprawling Indie world. I also discovered she’s a superhero buff, which etches her name in indelible ink in my personal cool book.  Picking up the Wizphone, I tracked her down as she walked the dogs on a freezing  spring day somewhere up North. Here’s what she had to say. 

As an American lady, how did you come to live over here? What are the key differences and what was the hardest thing you had to leave behind?

I used to say that when I retired, I'd move to an island and open a coffee shop. It would, of course, not be a particularly good coffee shop. (I was picturing a cheap automatic drip pot with some generic grind right out of a can.) That way I would have plenty of time to write trashy novels without constant interruptions er… customers. It just happened a bit earlier and not quite the same way as I planned when my company was sold and my husband was offered early retirement. 

We decided to go for the adventure—he took a job with a university in England and we ended up living in one tower of a medieval castle owned by some friends. So the island was a bit bigger than I expected, and there wasn't a coffee shop in our little village. But I did serve at coffee-mornings once a month. And I did start turning out those novels.

The key differences? I had to learn to speak British, of course. Mostly, this meant not talking about my pants (here men wear them under their trousers) and not saying I was pissed (here it means drunk instead of angry). I do miss a few things about the US though—good Mexican or Tex-Mex restaurants, celebrating the Fourth of July and Thanksgiving (for some reason, holidays commemorating successful decoupling from England just haven't really caught on here...), and people who know how to pronounce “aluminum”. But oh, what I get in return—fabulous cheese, even better chocolate, and cheap flights to France.



We recently moved to Glasgow, going from a 200+room castle to our tiny Hobbit House, so my current goal is to understand Weegie-speak.

Scottish icon and tourist ambassador Francis Begbie
enjoying a quiet night out

Tell us about your work. What’s the latest?
My daughter Hannah and I have this tiny little life-altering addiction to superhero movies. Okay, we’d probably starve to death with chocolate only a room away if a Marvel hero was in front of us. (Except Hulk, of course, because that would be just wrong in so many ways, starting with the costume.) But in general, give some guy a spandex outfit and a mask and he owns us.



One night we started talking about superheroes with awkward powers. Let’s say you are the Man of Steel, but you don’t dare have sex with Lois Lane because your LittleMan of Steel could quite probably split her in two. (And we’re not even going to discuss the havoc your Swimmers of Steel could wreck on Woman of Pasta…)

The point is that when you think about it, most people with special powers would be lining up to get their normal lives back. That’s where Null City comes in. It takes our fantasy worlds and turns them into everyday life. After one day there, those with extra gifts turn into their closest human counterparts. Imps, for example, become baristas. 

(Of course, they’re now ex-PhD candidates in literature or classics who claim to be experts on third-world coffee blends and obscure world music groups. But hey – there is only so close to human that hellspawn can get…)

And then what? What if you’re one of the superheroes going about regular human lives as plumbers and realtors and smartphone app developers, and someone pulls the plug on your city? The dogs you’re walking turn back into third-generation hellhound/toy poodle mixes. 

(Hoodles?) The kids you’re babysitting turn out to be part witch, part dragon, and part Minnesota Lutheran and start conjuring golden hotdish casseroles and flying jello molds. And after several generations of backyard barbecues and poker nights, nobody’s spandex fits anymore.#

My daughter and I talked about Null City for her last year of highschool. The one thing we couldn’t figure out was who the villain would be, when everyone is a hero. The problem with heroes, though, is that they don’t all have the same goals. What if each group – angels, superheroes, and just plain humans – is willing to do whatever it takes to make their right thing happen? 



So Hannah headed off to University in Scotland and I headed to my computer. One year and many hours of video chats later, the first Null City book, One Way Fare, was published by Taliesin (now Hartwood). Its backstory is the founding of Null City. 

In the second book, Don’t Touch, the backstory is the Metro train, Null City’s connection with the outside world. Book three, Round Trip Fare, explores what happens when saving Null City might mean destroying the world. Along the way, I also published Tales From Null City as a fundraiser for the no-kill shelter movement.



Can we have an extract, Barb?

ROUND TRIP FARE by Barb TaubMarch 2011: Seattle
“Wait here.”She had, Carey reminded herself, served ARC warrants on some of the most dangerous and violent runners the Agency had ever seen. She’d been shot at, stabbed, and hit upside the head with a surprisingly lethal Prada handbag. Just today, she’d brought in her prisoner, and she had all the proper approvals signed-off for the check she’d requested. So was she really supposed to cower out in the hallway because some Accords Agency accountant was glaring at her?
When the accountant in question was a were-badger whose eyes were squinting, nose quivering, and top lip even now raising over her teeth?
Carey dove for the gray plastic chair by the doorway. “You got it.”The clock on the wall outside of Accounting must have been left from the days when the Agency’s offices belonged to the previous tenant, a now-bankrupt software company, because it showed the time in binary code. Near as Carey could figure, she’d been looking at featureless gray walls and floors accented only by the red lights on the binary clock for 38 minutes. Or three days. She never quite got the hang of those flashing dots. Either way, her shot at making it to her class was history. Even as she mentally winced at that pun, Carey heard her name.“Warden Parker. You haven’t brought me any work lately. Where’s the love?”“Hey, Frankie. Believe me, I was tempted today.” She grinned at the petite figure in the lab coat. The Agency’s resident pathologist had autopsied more than one of Carey’s search targets. “So, resurrected anyone lately?”
“As I explained at the time…”  The scientist’s tone was severe, but the eyes behind the rimless glasses crinkled with amusement. “He was only mostly dead.”“If you want to hang onto your geek creds, Frankie, you need to quote something more badass—or at least more recent—than Princess Bride.”
Carey’s former Academy roommate, Claire Danielsen, had once explained patiently that the three of them—Claire, Frankie, and her partner Warden Laurel Franklin—were Carey’s friends. Carey wasn’t sure about that whole friends concept, but when Claire translated that as good people to get drunk with, she decided she could live with the definition.
Carey moved her chin slightly toward the accountant glaring at them.
Frankie’s freckles stood out against cheeks gone suddenly pale. Short, frizzy brown hair fluttered as she held up both hands, palms out. “Uh, right. Well, I’m… going somewhere. Tell Marley that Laurel and I are off to Portland for the weekend but we’re on for Beer Tuesday.” As she backed carefully toward the door, Frankie didn’t take her eyes from the quivering accountant.
Carey didn’t blame her in the least. After all—badgers. “Hang on. I’ll come with.”

Does your work have a genre?
It's the urban fantasy/sort-of-steampunk/the odd time travel/romance/humor genre. (It's kind of a niche genre.) My publisher calls it “mature young adult” but I think that's just because condoms are involved.



In your review of The Night Porter, you said you don’t go for Literary Fiction. Why is that? I hear it is making a BIG comeback after years on the genre-enforced sidelines.
I was once in a bookclub that fancied itself literary if they read anything that made the Booker shortlist. [still shuddering] The thing is that nobody actually liked any of those books, but I was the only one with the nerve to say so. Why did I keep going? Well, since the books were so awful, they had to pad the meeting with incredible food and much (very good) wine. I'd still be going if we hadn't moved away.

The latest craze in New York. Nude book groups

Of course, if the books were all like The Night Porter, I might start going for the discussion too. (Who am I kidding? It would probably still be the wine...)

You are a noted – and brilliant – reviewer. A blogger too. How do you describe what you do when you meet someone for the first time?
Okay, I'm having trouble getting past the “noted and brilliant” bit. I have to read that about another—oh, say, million times—before I can focus. So (Noted! Brilliant!!) right... the question. If you're asking about how I do reviews, it's simple. I give every book five stars. Then as I'm reading, I make notes and take stars away for painful, stupid, awkward bits. 

For edit fails (I read a lot of self-pubs, which somehow often seems to mean self-edited) I give them three fails within the first few pages. If it goes over that without being cancelled out by great writing, I tell the author I can't give them a good review. In a few cases, stars that are taken away get returned for excellent writing and overall entertainment value. 

In very rare cases (The Night Porter!!!) I wish I had more than five stars to give.


If you're asking what I do when I meet human people in the real world? They pretty much get three strikes too. Most of them take those right away.

Paperbacks or e-reader?
E-reader please. (I travel a lot.) I will say that the daughter of a good friend came to visit recently. When she saw our little Hobbit House here in Glasgow, she commented that in the old days you could learn so much about people by looking at the books on their shelves. But now everyone has those on their Kindles.

How do we get kids off the X-Box and back in their bedrooms with a book?
First of all, I like the X-Box. Second, I must see a different group of kids, because I'm not sure how big a problem this is. Online, in social media, and by email I'm constantly meeting kids and young adults who are completely addicted to reading, and to writing as well. 

Frankly, my big worry is who will read all the volumes they are generating. That's a good problem for the world to have, if you ask me.

Three favourite books, two favourite CDs and favourite film
Books? Good Omens by Neil Gailman & Terry Pratchett is my go-to desert island fare. 



After that, I'd probably take Cien años de soledad by Gabriel García Márquez because I've always wanted to read it in the original Spanish but never really had time to focus. And finally, I'd take the biggest blank book I could find because I pretty much like my own stories best.



CDs? I love Beethoven's Piano Concerto #5, by Alfred Brendel with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra conducted by James Levine. Okay, I know people say there are better versions, but for sentimental reasons (I heard them in amazing concert performance!), this is the one. 



The other CD (this week anyway) is Trio, with Linda Ronstadt, Dolly Parton, And Emmylou Harris.


Favorite film? Could I have the first (and only) season of Firefly? If not, how about Pride and Prejudice (the Colin Firth version of course).


You are invited for a walk with an inspirational figure. Where would you choose to go walking and who would you like to walk with?
I like to be around smart people. And the smartest person I ever worked for or met—arguably one of the smartest people on the planet—is Stephen Wolfram, physicist and youngest winner of the MacArthur “genius” award. 



When he needed a framework for his discoveries, he invented Mathematica, which calls itself (and is) “the world's definitive system of modern technical computing”. But the thing that never ceases to amaze me is just how interested Stephen is in pretty much everything. Hands down, that makes him the most fascinating person I've ever known, and I'd pretty much walk anywhere because I wouldn't be looking around anyway.

What does 2015 have in store for readers and supporters of Barb Taub?
Hopefully, with Round Trip Fare finished, I should be able to get a good start on the final book of the series. I've also been having fun blogging about travel, and that should continue. And of course, I have to focus on learning to at least understand Weegies.



Barb,  it’s been an absolute pleasure to meet you round the Cauldron, and I hope you have a terrific 2015 with your books - and also with the learning Glaswegian project.
Thanks Wiz, the pleasure was all mine.

Contact Barb

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Contact Barb Taub

BIO: In halcyon days BC (before children), Barb Taub wrote a humor column for several Midwest newspapers. With the arrival of Child #4, she veered toward the dark side and an HR career. Following a daring daytime escape to England, she's lived in a medieval castle and a hobbit house with her prince-of-a-guy and the World’s Most Spoiled AussieDog. Now all her days are Saturdays, and she spends  them consulting with her daughter on Marvel heroes, Null City, and translating from British to American. 


  









Sunday, 19 October 2014

Westminster insider and political novelist, Emma "Power Games" Gray, is...Around the Cauldron

There aren't many political thrillers in Indie and so when I met Emma Gray on my Twitterbus, I was keen to find out what was going on. 

I subsequently found out that Emma actually works at the Palace of Westminster and her novels are drawn from real life. 

This was too exciting an opportunity to pass up and when Emma released her follow up, "Power Games" I got on the Wizphone and asked her to answer a few questions for me. 

Emma's Question Time, as it were.

Though incredibly busy, she was happy to oblige and I caught up with her in one of the many cloisters that line the corridors of power in the Origin of Democracy. 

Here's what she had to say.

Tell us a bit about yourself, Emma?
Firstly, thanks so much for letting me get comfy around your cauldron today. It’s a particularly windy day so its green glow is keeping me happy. 

Well…I’ve been writing political fiction since I was 11, although my first story, The Plan To Assassinate The Prime Minister was a bit of a cop-out as it was ‘all a dream’. But hey I was only 11, so knowing who the Prime Minister was at all was surely impressive in itself? I’ve written various stories since then, but Party Games was my first real attempt at something publishable. 


It was quite a learning curve for an indie newbie but I’ve learned a lot in the intervening two years. Power Play is of course the sequel, but it can be read stand-alone. 

I’ve been overwhelmed with the support from the Twitter community since I published it on 10th October and so incredibly grateful to everyone. 

The high point had to be when the Daily Telegraph asked me when my book launch is….ha! Erm…!



My family is very understanding and supportive of my writing. We all know it’s not easy to find the time to sit and do it, and often inspiration alludes you, but with two kids and working full time you have to grab those precious writing moments when you can.  

Often for me it’s on the commute, but I think book 3, End Game, is going to take a while!

How did you get your job at Westminster? Was it difficult?
Westminster is, as you can imagine, often a case of who you know, so I got my job after interning as part of my university course. 


There has been a lot of controversy surrounding internships in Parliament, and I agree some can be exploited and there should be a level of payment, even if it just covers expenses, but it’s the best way in. It’s such an unusual, exciting, gossipy place to work, and describing it as the ‘village’ is partly accurate – it’s more like a town, it’s so huge, but you do feel strangely cut off from the outside world.

Do you enjoy your job or is it very stressful?
I’ve actually just taken on a new job but still with the same boss. I’m enjoying it actually, but I’m now commuting four days a week (I did three days previously) so it’s quite tiring. It has its stressful moments but I’ve got a great boss (plenty in Westminster don’t! The stories I could tell, and wish I could, but probably shouldn’t..! I’m thinking book 3 could be a place for that) so that makes all the difference. 

I’ve also started a Mindfulness course at work, which is brilliant and teaches you to exist ‘in the moment’ rather than worrying about the past or future. I would recommend it to everyone!



How accurate is The Thick of It?
Michael Dobbs has always said that to create political fiction, take reality and water it down. I think this is basically true – if anyone had made up ‘Plebgate’, the Brooks Newmark scandal or a politician and his wife bringing each other down over speeding points, you would be told what you had written was ridiculous. 


The Thick of It certainly had moments which rang true, worryingly, but I think it was probably pretty tame compared to reality. Politics is rich pickings for letting your mind run wild; you’ll probably be closer to real life than you think!

Tell us about your latest work 


I wrote Power Play in about 15 months, which is impressive considering it took ten years for me to write Party Games! It is based around the Conservative Party in Opposition but with a dark undertone. 

It could have been based around any party, but you write about what you know, and working for a Tory MP I learned a lot over the years (especially our Opposition years) at Westminster! I always use Mad Men as a comparison, in that you don’t have to be overtly political to read my book, in the same way you don’t have to have a big interest in advertising to watch Mad Men

It’s more about the pressure cooker world in which these highly ambitious people operate, their relationships and animosities, and where more along the corridors of power could people’s true natures reveal themselves? I’ve got a huge interest in the personalities at the top of the Third Reich (nurtured by the recent wonderful Clara Vine novels by the author Jane Thynne among other non-fiction tomes I have read recently), so I thought why not merge modern politics with what could happen if the Tory Party was led by a narcissistic maniac? 

The party splits into two factions as the book progresses: the moderates and those supporting Colin Scott, who plots a pact with UKIP in order to destroy it. There are hints at parallels between key Nazi personalities and my own characters, but it will be in the third book that it all goes a bit Downfall and my main antagonist finds himself on a course to self-destruction.

Can you share an extract from Power Games?

The first is about Matthew Gaines, my favourite character. He's a complex man who battles his demons throughout Power Play, and gets himself mixed up with things he knows in his heart he shouldn't. This extract is when he goes to one of Westminster's various bars and meets Hannah for the first time...

The Strangers’ Bar, although a compact watering hole deep in the heart of the Palace of Westminster, had on tap the widest selection of alcohol of any bar on the estate. It seemed as good a place as any to finish the day at such a late hour, so the House now adjourned, Matthew decided one drink would help him cope with home and the constant looks of disapproval from Sasha.
            Not feeling like an audience, Matthew hoped the narrow, cosy bar might be quiet, but a group of Labour MPs were occupying the tall bar tables, relaxation and humour mingling with some of the cheapest pints in London. Strangers’ was so small Matthew suddenly felt a little claustrophobic, but before he could change his mind, his eyes drifting from the MPs to the door as he backed up against the short bar, he heard a voice.
I don’t often see you here. In fact, I’m not sure I ever have.’ From behind the bar a woman with light mocha skin, dark, soft curls and impeccably dressed in a black skirt suit and red shirt caught his attention. Matthew turned awkwardly, aware he was being watched by a known Labour troublemaker.
‘Oh, I think this is probably only my third time in here since my election.’ Matthew smiled. His gaze fell upon her face and he was suddenly struck by a peculiar sadness that he had never seen her before now and hoped she couldn’t smell the cigarette smoke. He had officially given up but the odd one here and there kept his nerves a little steadier.
‘Well I won’t ask what’s brought you here tonight. So what’s your poison, then?’
‘Erm, just a Scotch, please, a single. Still got to get myself home somehow in this weather,’ Matthew said, sliding onto a stool and waving towards the Commons Terrace.
‘One of those days?’
‘Something like that.’
‘In that case, the drink’s on the house, or the taxpayer, whichever you prefer. I’m Hannah, by the way.’
‘I can see that by your name badge,’ Matthew replied. ‘And can you just do that? Give me a free drink?’
‘Probably not, but I am in charge today, and you look like you need it.’ Hannah produced a wry smile, placing the drink in front of him.
So it’s charity?’
Hannah shrugged. ‘OK, pay then if you like.’
‘I’ll pay for a pack of peanuts.’ Matthew twirled the drink on the mat.
‘Isn’t that what you lot pay your interns?’
Matthew noticed Hannah seemed quite young to be a manager, probably in her mid-thirties at most, but then everyone these days seemed young, either Michaels or Olivias, and recently he felt his years more than ever. He indulged in a little furtive observation, watching Hannah’s slim fingers polish up a shot glass, her hair brushing her shoulders as she worked. She was certainly attractive. Her gaze caught his eye then she looked away, as though they shared a guilty secret.
            ‘I’m Matthew, by the way.’
            ‘That’s not what the Labour lot calls you, mean bunch,’ Hannah quipped. ‘Everyone knows that you’re the Tories’ “Big I Am”, if you don’t count Colin Scott, of course. Though something tells me he wouldn’t like not to be counted. And as for what they call him...
            ‘Are you always this rude?’ Matthew sipped the drink and munched through the packet of nuts.
            ‘I’m just telling you what people say about you, thought I’d be doing you a favour. And anyway, I gave you a freebie, didn’t I?’ Hannah gestured to the glass.
            ‘I’m well aware what people say about me, unfortunately,’ Matthew said. He felt his phone vibrate but he didn’t react. ‘I doubt that being compared to a mass-murdering fascist propagandist is meant to be that much of a compliment, though I could be wrong.’
Hannah raised a perfectly plucked eyebrow. ‘Oh, I bet you love it more than you let on.’ Matthew sniffed, amused by her strangely accurate observation. She seemed far too beautiful to stay working for the refreshment department for long, there was a special quality to her, as though she should be going places, and not just to the dishwasher and back.
‘She’s a tease, this one,’ a fairly short, balding Labour MP called to him with a chuckle, winking at Hannah, who glared at him reproachfully. ‘Anyway, the Führer let you off your leash for the night, has he, Herr Doktor?’
Hannah threw Matthew a sympathetic glance, but he saw something else in her eyes he couldn’t place.
‘Don’t listen to this lot.’ She began to pull a pint for a colleague who had slid along the bar, invading the relative privacy of their eye contact. Matthew felt disappointed. ‘Bloody rowdy bunch, although they certainly do keep me in a job.’
With a private smirk at the continuing taunts from behind him, Matthew tossed a five pound note, by way of a tip, across the counter, stole another glance at Hannah, knocked back the drink then quickly left for home. Sasha, he decided, was unlikely to have waited up. 
MPs are notoriously clannish: What do your colleagues think about your work? Do they think you are spilling the beans?

Ha! I was asked by the Telegraph…I don’t know, is the short answer! My colleagues, i.e. other staff, think it’s great I’ve written about Westminster and are very supportive and impressed. As for the MPs…well my boss read my first book, which he told me he enjoyed, I now hope he’s reading the second one!

My third cousin Dave in classic edu-com, Please Sir (1971)

MPs don’t seem to take declining literacy in the cradle of the English language very seriously. How can we change that? What would you do?

Firstly, at the risk of sounding all a bit Michael Gove, I think there is a big problem with literacy among teachers. My cousin is a teacher and she says it’s shocking how many have bad grammar, both written and verbal. Until that is tackled, what hope is there for pupils? Teachers have also been told not to correct how children speak so they can ‘express themselves’. What utter tosh. I would expect my children to be corrected (as I do at home) and find it very worrying that standards are dropping in the basics. 

2009 rankings

Secondly, 2013 PISA statistics placed the UK at 26th in the world for Maths and 23rd for reading. I could get all party political and blame Labour for not targeting spending effectively, but I think it is far more complex than that.


 Throwing money at the education system won’t necessarily deal with the problems (we have spent more here per head than other, better performing countries), I think effective collaboration between good teachers and schools and those which are struggling is the way to go. 

There should be no bad schools or bad teachers and it is by sharing best practice, and the Government encouraging such best practice, that things can improve. 



Give us your favourite a) two books  b) DVD and c) CD
Ah, back to less serious things!

I loved the Jane Thynne books Black Roses and The Winter Garden as they are so evocative and wonderfully descriptive about Nazi Germany in the 1930s. 


I could read her books forever and I’m always disappointed when I’ve finished them! I’ve also recently enjoyed Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall and Bring Up The Bodies; they are difficult to read at first, but once you’ve got used to Mantel’s writing style they are absorbing and thoroughly compelling.



DVD…oooh, that could cover films or box sets, couldn’t it? My favourite box set is Castle, as it’s one of my favourite programmes! 



Not very high-brow, I realise, but it’s chewing gum for the mind, well written and about a crime-sleuthing author. Perfect!

CD… the first Keane album, Hopes and Fears, was a favourite car CD for a long time and one of the best mainstream albums (in my opinion!) of the mid 2000s. 



It also reminds me of my life before kids! Ahh, the nostalgia!

House of Cards: British or US version?
Gosh, another toughie! I’ve only seen season 1 of the US version, and it was of course outstanding, but I can’t help feel huge affection for the original UK series and Ian Richardson’s compelling stare. 



The British version is what inspired my political fiction over the years, so I will have to say that, although I’m hoping to watch Kevin Spacey in the US’s season 2 as soon as I can!

Sir Charles "Uncle Chas" Barry

My third generation ancestor, Sir Charles Barry (known as Uncle Chas, in our house), designed and rebuilt the Palace of Westminster (AKA Houses of Parliament) over 26 years, completing in 1854.  Did he do a good job? Or is there something you would change?

Wow Wiz, that’s AMAZING! I am so impressed with your ancestry! Ever thought of being on Who Do You Think You Are?? Perhaps you should write a book about him, he seemed a very interesting character! 



He also built Highclere (aka Downton Abbey!) which is just down the road from me. 


He did a very good job on 
Parliament, it’s just the internal maintenance hasn’t been as good as it should over the years! I’m now based over in Portcullis House (which is already falling apart) but before that I was stuck down in the Palace basement (or bunker, as I called it!) with the mice and the weird smells. I think Parliament is slowly sinking into the river, and there were rumours that everyone would be moved out for a number of years before it finally slid away, but I think it would be so expensive nobody wants to commit to it! Having said all that, I do feel so incredibly privileged to work there, and in such history. Do come and visit me at some point, I’ll give you a tour!

I shall take you up on that, Emma! As long as you introduce me to Dennis Skinner :D So, what is your favourite meal to a) cook and b) eat.
I’m not hugely into cooking, but I’m told by my family I make a mean lasagne and I’m not too bad at a fruit cake either!
To eat…I do love a good roast, especially at Christmas, and I’m a massive Christmas pudding fan. My granny was a domestic science teacher and makes the best Christmas pudding and Christmas cake, so I look forward to that every year!



Finally, what do fans of Emma Gray have to look forward to in 2015?
Well the sequel to Power Play won’t be for a couple of years at least, so really I’m looking to increase my blog presence and carry out more interviews (I do hope you will oblige!). 

I do write articles for various online publications, including Conservative Home, Total Politics and Backbench, so I’m hoping to keep writing publicly one way or another! End Game will keep me busy too, that’s for sure, and boy will it be dark….

Emma, it's been a great pleasure to meet you, and thank you for coming round the Cauldron. I, and all the Wizardwatchers, wish you every success with Power Games.. 
Thanks so much for having me here, Wiz. It's been great!

Contact Emma here:

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