Showing posts with label Kate Blackadder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kate Blackadder. Show all posts

Wednesday, 7 December 2016

Christmas Childhood Memories with Kate Blackadder

I’m delighted to welcome writing colleague and fellow Scot Kate Blackadder to the Reading and Writing blog today. I’ve long enjoyed Kate’s lovely short stories in women’s magazines over the years, as well as a couple of her serials. Now it’s a special pleasure that her debut novel, Stella’s Christmas Wish, is now published by Black and White in Edinburgh.

Kate is sharing some Christmas memories with us but first let me introduce her heart-warming novel. You can catch her other posts on the blog tour below.



Stella’s Christmas Wish

Six days before Christmas, Stella must rush home to Scotland when her grandmother is taken to hospital. As she reconnects with her past, old flames are rekindled, and as Christmas fast approaches, Stella begins to wonder if her most heartfelt wish can come true?

Uprooted from her life in London and back in her childhood home of the Scottish borders, Stella is soon faced with relationships which have lain dormant for years. New opportunities present themselves, but will Stella dare to take them...

Stella’s Christmas Wish is set in Edinburgh and the Borders and is published as an e-book by Black and White Publishing at 99p - click on the book title to buy!

Thanks for sharing these delightful memories, Kate!

When Christmas trees were tall … five childhood memories

1) A budding writer from an early age (although it took me rather a long time to get past the budding stage), one year I asked for a typewriter. I’m sure my disappointment showed – sorry, Mum – when I realised that instead of a keyboard it had a dial that you set to a letter before hitting a button. It would have taken months to write a list for Santa, never mind the stories that filled my head.

2) We lived on a large country estate and every year there was a Christmas party for the employees’ children in the village hall. We played The Farmer’s in his Den, In and Out the Dusty Bluebells – all the old, well-loved games. But don’t let it be said that the Swinging Sixties didn’t reach the north of Scotland – there was also a Twist competition (with Chubby Checker on the record player) and I won!

3) Family friends and relatives soon realised that they needn’t ask my mum what I would like for Christmas – the answer was always books. It’s lovely to still have hardback copies of Little Women, What Katy Did and lots more, with inscriptions from some of my favourite people.

4) My dad had Canadian relatives and two of them, unmarried women, worked in Eatons, a department store in Vancouver. There was my sister and brother and myself and around a dozen cousins on that side of the family, and these lovely ladies bought and sent carefully chosen Christmas presents to all of us. The Eatons’ packaging and the contents seemed so glamorous but it’s the cousins’ thoughtfulness I appreciate now.

5) One afternoon in the Christmas holidays my mum had asked another family round – three children and their mother. As usual, Mum made a huge amount of savouries and cakes and after we’d finished scoffing she cleared the large load of kept-for-visitors-china through to the kitchen and she and the other mother settled down for a chat by the sitting-room fire, telling us to go and play.

Well, the older girl in the other family was, it has to be said, a Miss Goody-Two-Shoes. No hide-and-seek or Ludo for her. No. Her idea of ‘playing’ was that we should give our mothers a nice surprise by – doing the washing up. And we – all six of us under the age of ten – went along with it. My mother was certainly surprised …

Thank you for having me on your blog, Rosemary. I hope all your Christmas wishes come true.

And yours, thanks Kate! I really enjoyed Stella's Christmas Wish

About Kate Blackadder

Kate lives in Edinburgh and has had around fifty short stories published and three magazine serials (two now on Kindle). Stella’s Christmas Wish is her first full-length novel.

You can connect with Kate on her Blog and Facebook and  on twitter as @k_blackadder

Saturday, 12 March 2016

New Short Story Collections

Many of my blogging friends and fellow writers began with writing short stories, as I did myself many years ago, and it's always a pleasure to discover new collections. The following are from three very different authors and each offers delights for the reader.

Weird Tales by Jack Hastie

Jack is a fellow member of my writing group whose entertaining, satirical and sometimes disturbing short stories have long left us enthralled and I'm delighted that he now has put fifteen together in this first collection. They are described thus:

Here are fifteen stories of the weird and wonderful, the tragic and the vengeful, with a Scottish flavour. Sometimes satirical, sometimes lyrical, the collection makes some scathing comments on commercialisation and political correctness in contemporary society. Don`t read on unless you are prepared to accept “a willing suspension of disbelief” in things that should never happen.

Available on Amazon UK and US. Soon to be in print.




Three's a Crowd by Kate Blackadder

I've known Kate for many years through the Scottish Association of Writers and have enjoyed many of her published short stories in women's magazines. She has recently been a guest author at the People's Friend short story workshops in various parts of Scotland. This is Kate's first collection of family stories previously published in The People's Friend, Woman's Weekly, and Woman's Day (an Australian magazine). A reviewer said the following:

These are superbly written, with great characterisation, and I found myself immediately drawn into the story, which is always the sign of a skilful writer at the top of their game.

Available on Amazon UK and US and also in print.





When Planets Slip their Tracks by Joanna Campbell

Joanna has been a blogging friend for many years and I've been following her writing career ever since first reading her wonderful stories published in various women's magazines and Writers' Forum. She has since won several prestigious prizes and this is her first collection of short stories. This is part of the description on Amazon:

Tracing the fragile paths of people who desperately want to belong, Campbell catches her characters in the moment where they find themselves floundering. These are characters at the edge of their endurance, experiencing the moment when life threatens to tip out of their control. With a light comic flair, Campbell follows them through the twists and turns of their experiences.

Available on Amazon UK and US and also in print.


Enjoy!
Rosemary