Q&A With Jenn J McLeod Author of Season of Shadow and Light
Welcome all to my stop on the Season of Shadow and Light Blog Tour, which kicked off a little while ago and is stopping by a number of wonderful Australian book blogs. The purpose of the tour is to promote Australian author Jenn J McLeod's latest release Season of Shadow and Light which I read and reviewed recently. (Read my review here.) Anyway, as part of the tour today I am lucky enough to be interviewing Jenn J McLeod. I loved her answers to my (somewhat difficult) questions and I think that you will too ...
Hi Jenn! Thank you very much for stopping by. Although we
have chatted many times on social media, this is your first visit to my blog.
Congratulations on the publication of Season
of Shadow and Light, which I found to be quite the page turner… Would you like to
tell us a little about Season of Shadow
and Light?
Ha, ha! Thanks for that intro, Kathryn! *wink*. Speaking of
laughs . . .
Readers should prepare to laugh, to cry, and to cheer as
Paige, her six year old daughter, Matilda, and Nana Alice, find themselves
stranded amid
rising floodwaters and detoured to the tiny town of Coolabah Tree Gully.
There’s a publican with an uncanny resemblance to Mr
Magoo, a cranky cook battling a broken heart, and someone who knows that truth
can wash away the darkest shadows, but the question is…
Are some secrets best kept for the sake of others?
Paige is a mother on a personal mission. Aiden, once a
sought after executive chef, is now executive chip fryer at his uncle’s small
town pub, and Alice is charged with a dead woman's secret and a promise to
never tell—even when the truth might help the living.
This
is story of betrayal, of tragedy, of family loyalty and of trust—the kind of
trust that takes years to build but only seconds to wash away and what Paige
discovers in Coolabah Tree Gully is that the greatest betrayal of all happened
there twenty years earlier.
As I read Season of Shadow and Light I found
myself drawn to Alice. She silently suffers throughout the course of the novel,
but I found the way that she resolved the situation to be admirable. Was she a
difficult character to write about?
Interesting you should feel that, Kathryn. I refer to Alice
as my ‘hijack character’. She started out as a secondary character—the one who
is supposed to lend a supporting role to the leading lady—only I found myself getting
involved in Alice’s backstory and she would not be reined in. For this reason I
found her incredibly easy to write. Perhaps it helped that there is so much of
me in this book. When I say ‘me’ I mean things I am passionate about; often
Alice was that voice. The more I dug down, peeling Alice’s tough layer away to
discover a fragility (and the reasons behind it) I found myself wanting her to
have her own character arc and growth with Paige, while opposing her daughter
in every way. Alice put her trust in me to tell her very special love story.
The name ‘Alice’ holds a lot of significance and although
the real life Alice has nothing in common with the fictional Alice, I still
felt a strong connection, which helped me with some of the more emotional
scenes. Perhaps that’s why you found yourself drawn to her character, Kathryn? And
I’m glad you liked the way Alice resolved things. I believe she has the most
devastating conflict: Is she obligated to
protect the deceptions of the dead when the truth might somehow help the
living?
What a great premise for a
story! Are some secrets best buried
forever? I loved this conundrum and because of it I think readers will have
different views about Alice, about how the relationship she had with her
parents shaped her life, and whether her reasons for keeping the secret are
enough to warrant such deception.
So, yes, while Paige and Aiden
(with their impossible relationship) are fabulous, I admit to Alice hijacking
me along the way. But I enjoyed creating Aiden (love a damaged man) and I think
Sharni is such an unexpected joy. Then, of course, there’s Rory . . . Talk
about turning someone around. Rory needed help. I loved delivering on that.
How did the title for
Season of Shadow and Light originate?
Firstly, I love the word shadow. I love that a single word can
represent both the serene (like the soft early morning light and a dark) and
the scary (like those ominous shapes that creep over the bedroom walls at night!);
all depending on your perspective and your life experiences, of course.
Shadow and light immediately says contrast to me. Contrast
creates conflict and all good fiction requires its share. So I purposely
created two people who conflicted in different ways: in appearance, in
attitude, in upbringing. And due to circumstances became “perfect opposites”.
That allowed me to explore the nature vs.
nurture concept that has always interested me. Are we a product of our
environment or our genes? This was also a subject I could draw on from personal
experience.
I grew up in a loving home in the affluent Sydney northern
beaches. I was secure, happy, supported and encouraged—the halo effect in full
force. In my early twenties (when I was pretty full of myself, my future set) I
met someone who was the opposite of me.
In this novel I make references to yin and yang philosophies
as ‘the perfect union of opposites’. My ‘perfect opposite’ changed my life in
the most profound and lasting ways, with the experience providing me with ample
“There but for the grace of God go I”
moments early on in life. I used to ask myself: What if I’d been the one born
into a working class family, having grown up in an old terrace where my
backyard was the skinny street of a tough Sydney suburb in the sixties and seventies?
How would I have coped with the loss of a mother before I turned thirty, an
abusive stepfather, or being pulled from school early so I could get a job to
pay the family bills (in doing so, giving up the training that would see my
Olympic dream come true—just one year short of team selection)?
Alice has a line in Season of Shadow and Light that
refers to yin-and-yang being the perfect union of opposites.
‘Yin-and-yang
manifests itself physically all around us: fire and water, hot and cold,
nightmare and dream, even life and death. Then there’s shadow and light.’ Alice
paused before saying through her tears, ‘You know shadow does not exist without
light.’
Not only do I love that last line, it is integral to the
story. In many ways it’s about perspective. If we learn to view the world
through others’ eyes, consider different viewpoints, greater understanding will
follow and there’ll be less need to worry about nature versus nurture. In the
end, we are who we are and love is love.
As a reader, I very
much enjoyed your depictions of rural Australia. As a friend and follower of
your Facebook page, I have also enjoyed following your adventures as you travel
through Australia, battling everything from severe storms to cranky supermarket
employees. What do you like most about rural Australia?
Oh, yes, give me a fierce storm any day! :-) But let me clarify for the record (as determined by my random Facebook poll
that day, Kathryn) my cavalier carry basket behaviour in the supermarket
checkout did perhaps contribute to
Miss Cranky Pants’ extreme attitude. I think I needed to see life through her
eyes before passing judgement.
Which is exactly why I want to travel. Besides running out
of friends and family to ficitonalise I am keen to experience the extremes of
rural life. Once we get into our travel groove we want to get involved and
there are websites (like this one http://www.frontierservices.org/how-you-can-help/volunteer)
that connects volunteers with families in regional areas who need help.
Sometimes all that’s needed is a week away from the property to attend a
medical appointment. Something I would not have thought about once. Talk about
seeing life through different eyes!
Do you have any
favourite or special small Australian towns?
Not yet! But discovering new places to inspire new small
town stories is what life on the road in my caravan is all about. I did find
inspiration for this novel in Boonah, one of the many towns scattered across an
area called The Scenic Rim—a spectacular volcanic escarpment located in
Queensland’s south-east region. The quaint country atmosphere of Boonah, and
neighbouring Kalbar, belies the towns’ closeness to Brisbane and I plan on
returning as I saw very little of the area when I was there overnight for a
book launch a couple of years back. Only after leaving town did I found out there’s
a Scenic Rim Historic Pub Trail. What’s not to love about that?
The pub you will read about in Season of Shadow and Light
is based on the one I stayed in, crooked floors and all. If you ever find
yourself in Boonah, visit The Story Tree—a beaut little bookshop. Why? Because it
has books AND serves coffee!
What advice do you
have for aspiring writers?
First I'd say writing for publication is not the same as
writing for pleasure. Being a published author turns a hobby on its head,
frustrates the family, and tests your patience. My advice is threefold …
- It's never too early to start thinking like a published author.
- Develop a head for business and learn to plan – sometimes the marketing, accounting and time management parts of this gig are more small business operator than writer.
- Give those closest to you the opportunity to share your journey. Don't assume they already know. Don't assume they don't want to understand. With involvement comes support – and you will need that in bucket-loads
Outside the Port Broughton pub. |
Is there anything
that you would like to say to your readers in Adelaide, Australia?
What a great question, Kathryn. The first thing I’d say is “See
you soon!” because I can’t wait to make my way back. And when I say back . . .
I love SA. As a child I enjoyed many
family trips with all five of us in the Ford Falcon, the old Viscount caravan
crawling along behind. I still have relatives scattered from the Adelaide Hills
to Port Lincoln. There’s even a family plot in Payneham Cemetery. (Helps that
my ancestor, John Monk—who sailed out on HMAS Buffalo in 1836—was the grave
planner.)
Passenger list for the HMS Buffalo |
My grandmother opted to be buried there, with her sisters, one of
whom is Joy Richardson, founder of the SA Animal Welfare League. (Must be where
I get my love of rescue animals.) So you see, I have more than a little bit of
SA flowing through my veins (and often quite a nice drop of Barossa wine as
well!)
Cheers!
Thank you for stopping by Jenn! Season of Shadow and Light is now available from all good bookstores and online retailers. You can find out more about Jenn J McLeod and Season of Shadow of Light at Simon and Schuster Australia's website and don't forget to stop by all of the other great blogs that are participating in the tour. (I've read all of their posts so far and every single one is brilliant. Kudos to Jenn and all of the bloggers who are taking part.)
Comments
Barrie Callaghan