By
Peter Perrin (Guest Blogger)
A
few years ago, my granddaughter self-published two novels on Amazon,
at the age of fourteen. I was impressed with this and decided to try
writing a novel myself, after all they do say everyone
has a book in them. I thought that at the very least it would be a
good mental exercise for my then
sixty-nine-year-old brain.
How much
exercise I
could never
have imagined.
I
believed the younger generation thought most people over the age of
sixty had one foot in the grave, and were just killing time until the
grim reaper claimed them. But, I knew that wasn’t the case for many
people, so I looked for a way to write something to show them in a
positive light.
Even though at this time I had never read even a single romance novel I decided to write a romance, with the hero and heroine both being over sixty. And, I came up with the idea of my characters being residents at a retirement village that was pretty much a private five star hotel. There was a lot of scope for activities and relationships and I was sure the idea would work.
Unfortunately,
I had virtually no previous writing experience or training and no
idea about planning, outlining, plotting etc. So, the book started
off as a series of conversations, and developed slowly from there.
Sadly, my inexperience meant that a lot of what I wrote wasn’t very
good, and I had to throw away a lot of material as the book developed
and the story just didn’t work properly. This meant the book took a
lot longer than I had initially expected it to.
Before
I really started on the body of the novel I created separate
Character Portraits for both the heroine and hero. Then I created a
virtual interview with each of them. On top of that I looked at how
certain star signs are supposed to work together, or not. From that I
came up with the idea the heroine would be a Pisces and the hero
would be Aries. Astrologically it is claimed that for these two signs
when their minds link it is magical. They stimulate each other, both
in sexual and non-sexual ways. And they are also inclined to irritate
each other. This gave me a strong feeling for how they would get on
in the story and why at times they wouldn’t.
I think my decision to set my book in a retirement village was a brave one. It meant that much of the action would either be based in that location, or start or finish there. But, I felt that by doing so I had a perfect excuse to have so many mature people in one location, trying to get along with one another. And in some cases, they would be trying to do a lot more than just get along. My wife and I went to visit one such retirement village and were impressed by the facilities available there. It was that establishment that gave me the idea of having my imaginary village (The Grange) set in a seventeenth-century mansion that had been converted into a modern retirement complex with first-class facilities, rather than a characterless modern building.
As
the book developed so I came to know my characters—especially the
main ones—and began to think of them as real people. At times I
could really feel them interacting together as if I was present as an
observer. At times I felt quite emotional when reading back some of
what I’d written and that made me feel I must be doing something
right. But the highlights were when, on several occasions, I looked
over what I had written and thought ‘that wasn’t supposed to
happen’ or ‘I never meant them to say that’. I had experienced
what I had previously only heard about; my characters had written
part of the story themselves. What a remarkable and deeply satisfying
feeling that was.
I
submitted a sample chapter to a publisher to see if it fitted with
the sort of work they published, and it did. After a year of
rewriting and polishing the manuscript I submitted it and ten months
ago I won a publishing contract. Now, at the age
of seventy-three, my debut novel, Grace’s Turmoil has just
been published by Devine Destinies as Book One of a series called
‘Not Too Old for Love.’ And within a few days it will be
available from Amazon, both as an eBook and in paperback.
It
seems that over recent years more and more readers of romance had
become frustrated that all the heroines they read about were aged
about twenty, whilst they themselves were on average at least ten
years older. They were looking for heroines they could identify with.
Women who had life experience and carried emotional baggage with
them. Women who had experienced the pain of becoming a widow, or
experiencing a painful divorce. In short, real women.
Unfortunately
the book was finished before I knew so many romance readers felt like
that, so I guess I’m lucky that my instincts drove me to write
about the sort of people I did. Now it seems that there are a growing
number of authors writing for this new market, which seems to be
being referred to as Seasoned Romance, Second Chance Romance, and the
like. I’m proud to be a part of that growing band of authors trying
to respond to this demand.
This
started out to be one stand-alone novel, but people who critiqued it
along the way wanted certain characters to get their own book(s)
later, so I decide to try my hand at creating a series in which each
of the books would be stand-alone, but would be linked by at least
one character from a previous book. There have
certainly been enough interesting characters created to lead to
another two books, and I have the seed of an idea for a couple more.
This is exciting for me but has the downside that I’m going to have
to write much quicker, and more efficiently in the future to make
this possible.
Wish
me luck.
Blurb
Divorced
and emotionally damaged, artist Grace Stollery wants nothing more
than to spend her semi-retirement painting and let time heal her
emotional scars.
But
when dashing widower Alfred Nobel moves into her retirement village
he turns her life upside down and her heart inside out by awakening
feelings she wants to keep dormant.
Alfred
quickly sets out to woo Grace and slowly she warms to him. But the
village’s resident femme fatale wants him for herself. Will she
succeed in driving a wedge between Alfred and Grace?
Excerpt
Grace
jabbed at the volume button on the remote control, turning up the
sound on the television. She was trying to drown out the chatter
which filled the palatial residents’ lounge. It had been like that
for days, and she’d grown tired of it. Who would have thought the
imminent arrival of one man could affect mature ladies like that?
One
of the things which had appealed to her when she moved to The
Grange
retirement village was the lack of men. Yet a man who aroused
feelings in her she didn’t want was going to add to their number.
Grace
had caught a glimpse of him across The
Lounge a few
months ago, taking the standard tour of The
Grange.
He'd towered over the young woman he’d been with, and she’d
guessed he was at least six-foot-five. Built like a tank, with a mass
of wavy white hair and a snow-white beard, he’d reminded her of a
polar bear. His presence had been overpowering and almost menacing.
An image of him defending a seventeenth century mansion in days gone
by had jumped into her mind.
Looking
at him had sent a spontaneous burst of attraction rippling through
her. It had caught her by surprise. Becoming attracted to anybody was
the last thing she’d needed right then. Her divorce had been too
recent and too painful. All she wanted was to focus on her painting
to block out the pain. Although she hadn’t come there to look for a
man, there was no denying how she’d reacted to the sight of him.
She wondered how she would cope when they met. And she couldn’t
help feeling he was going to have quite an impact on her life.
Whether it would be a good impact or not was the million-dollar
question. He might be the greatest thing since sliced bread! Or he
could turn out to be a snake in the grass like her ex-husband.
Buy
Links:
http://www.devinedestinies.com/grace-s-turmoil/
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.fr/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.de/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.it/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.au/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.es/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.ca/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.fr/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.de/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.it/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.au/dp/B078GBQY4D/
https://www.amazon.es/dp/B078GBQY4D/
About
the Author
Peter
Perrin writes sweet, seasoned romances involving larger-than-life
mature characters who will make you rethink your views on older
people in a positive way. His characters are mature in age but not
necessarily in their behaviour. They may not be in the first flush of
youth but that doesn’t stop some of them acting like hormonal
teenagers.
Peter
was born in Romford, in the county of Essex, near London, England.
For nearly twenty years he has lived with his wife of almost forty
years in a quiet suburb of Swindon, in the county of Wiltshire, in
England. He is a father and grandfather.
He
is a former member of The Royal Air Force who has served in the UK,
and in Madagascar, Singapore, and Saudi Arabia. He was also stationed
for two years in Aden—which nowadays is part of Yemen.
After
almost fifteen-years’ service in The Royal Air Force Peter worked
in Engineering, Quality Control, and Procurement Management, not to
mention myriad smaller jobs in between those careers.
Now
that he is retired, Peter’s interests are writing, carp fishing,
and (despite being in his early seventies) PC and PlayStation games.
His
favourite quote is “Youth passes, but with luck, immaturity can
last a lifetime.”
Website:
https://peterperrin.blog
Blog:
https://peterperrin.blog
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/peterperrin44
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/PeterPerrin44/
Pinterest:
https://www.pinterest.co.uk/peterperrin/
4 comments:
Thanks for having me, Lisabet. I hope your readers enjoy the post.
I've read Grace's Turmoil and I have to say that's it's simply wonderful. Highly recommend! Peter, it was interesting to read your "behind the scenes" look at how you got published. You've got a gift for writing and I hope to read many more by you. :)
Great first book, Peter - now get on to book 2 :-) Tweeted.
Hello, Peter,
So sorry I wasn't here to welcome you yesterday. Life intervened...!
Huge congratulations on getting your first book out there. And as Mrs. Light and Daryl have said, looking forward to your next!
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