Iām delighted to have my friend Anna Jacobs as a guest today. Annaās books arenāt well known in the US, but in Britain and Australia, sheās a bestseller as well as one of the most borrowed authors in both countriesā library systems. (And this matters, since unlike the US, authors earn money from multiple book borrowings under the Public Lending Rights schemes.)
Anna is remarkably versatile, having started in fantasy under the name Shannah Jay. (Those novels are now available as e-books.)
More recently she's written many historical novels as well as a number of contemporaries. Her stories are classified as āromanticā rather than āromances;ā in the American genre classifications, theyād probably be considered womenās fiction.
Sheās known for her happy endings (warm fuzzies is how she describes it) and in this day of e-books and free shipping from www.bookdepository.com her books are available world wide. Soāover to Anna Jacobs!
MJP: Letās start with the present and work back. Just this week, you have a new historical release called The Traderās Sister. Can you tell us something about this book, and about the series of which itās book 2?
AJ: The four-part Traders series is set in Western Australia, the Orient and Ireland from the mid 1860s to the early 1870s (all of them make sense as single stories, too). I live in Western Australia and I felt its history had been neglected compared to Sydney and the eastern side of Australia, so Iām personally remedying that - and giving readers stories that are a bit different, I hope.
The Trader in question is Bram Deagan, a former groom from Ireland who has risked all to set up as a trader, bringing goods from Singapore to Western Australia. Heās the hero of Book 1. The Traderās Wife, and is present in all books in the series, but is not the hero of the others. Heās my favourite hero out of all the books Iāve written.
The Traderās Sister tells the story of Ismay Deagan. When her father tries to force her to marry a brutal man, she runs away from Ireland to join her brother in Australia. She meets Adam Tregear on the ship and finally starts to believe her dreams of future happiness may come true.
Before she reaches Australia, however, theyāre flung into danger in Suez, Ceylon and Singapore. Dare she tell Adam the truth about who she really is? Does he have secrets of his own? And will her past catch up with her and ruin her new-found happiness?
Iāve loved researching this series. #3, The Traderās Dream is about Bramās young aunt Maura, and we sail with her in the flotilla of ships that passed through the Suez Canal at its opening. Iād been waiting ten years to put that incident into a book.
You can read the first chapters of all my books on my website plus information available nowhere else. The Traderās Sister is at: http://www.annajacobs.com/book.aspx?title=The-Traders-Sister&bookID=64
MJP: You got your start in historical novels in the āclogs and shawlsā style for which Catherine Cookson was known. (And perhaps she invented it.) Can you tell us more about that genre?
AJ: I got a false start first with a regency romance called Persons of Rank, which won a $10,000 prize. But that led nowhere as the publisherās management changed what it was doing.
I got my real start by writing āsagasā (UK style) and āclogs and shawlsā is one type of saga. They always involve a working class woman battling the odds - and winning! Thereās always a romance, but the stories have several subplots as well as the main one. Authors who write sagas try very hard to get their history right, because UK readers are sticklers about the details and enjoy ātastingā daily life of the times. Sagas usually have a strong regional base, so each saga writer is known for a particular region.
That doesnāt mean the books are overloaded with historical information. My goodness, no! Theyāre about characters and their relationships above all, with a happy ending romance between main hero and heroine. I sometimes have two or three romances in a book, though. I canāt leave my nice minor characters unhappy, can I? And what is happier than finding true love?
Sagas have been a top-selling genre in the UK for many decades and theyāre still going strong. Iām writing sagas for two publishers, both under my Anna Jacobs name. For my main publisher thatās moved towards Aussie historicals; for the other I still write traditional sagas - set mainly in Wiltshire.
MJP: Your historicals have evolved over the years. Could you tell us more about that?
AJ: I started off not even knowing I was writing a saga (pre-Internet, less information about). I wanted to write a book about the other people in a Lancashire mill town, not those who work in the mill or wear clogs and shawls. (When I was at school, we so looked down on children who wore clogs!)
So I wrote Salem Street, first in the five-part Gibson Family Saga, a rags to riches tale set in my home county of Lancashire. It was published in 1994 and is still being reprinted regularly. Itās my best-selling series of all, and is now in ebook format as well as in paper books.
After a few years, since I had moved to Australia, I wanted to try an Aussie (pronounced Ozzee) saga. My publisher was doubtful but gave it a go with Lancashire Lass. It sold really well, so they continued to let me write an occasional Aussie tale. Then the Aussie branch of my publisher got involved and began publishing its own editions, so I write only Aussie tales for them now. Iām loving it. More importantly, so are my readers.
I had also written some historical romances for another publisher in my early days and theyāre now out as ebooks. They arenāt like US romances, because they have a stronger, non-romance story line and several sub-plots, but theyāre closer to romance than to sagas. One of them, Mistress of Marymoor, is my bestselling ebook of all. Itās a gothic tale set in 1759, with the heroine making a marriage of convenience in order to inherit a house on the edge of the moors, and having to cope with plots against her and her new husband.
And as Mary Jo said, I also write modern āwomenās fictionā, which is actually starting to sell in the USA. The variety of stories is one thing that keeps me fresh and interested. My latest modern novel Winds of Change, set in both Australia and the UK, and was published in March. Here's an excerpt of the first chapter.
MJP: On a more personal note, youāre a citizen of two nationsāborn and raised in the UK, emigrated to Australia, and you now have homes in both countries. Many British citizens emigrate to other countries for opportunities, particularly the old Empire nations of Australia, New Zealand, and Canada. And often they later return to their homelands, as our Jo Beverley has done after decades in Canada. Could you tell us more about this? And about the joys and complications of living in two countries?
AJ: We emigrated to Australia in our 30s, with our two young children, and we love living here. We have a house on the waterās edge, where dolphins swim past regularly, and several sorts of parrot fly around our garden. Itās wonderful. But we also love the UK because it has the history and the lush beauty of landscape you donāt get in a much drier and younger country. But we couldnāt cope with the winters and snow (shudder) which were partly why we emigrated. We saved money carefully to buy a second home in the UK.
Itās hard work living in two countries, though. You have to prepare one house to leave - and do a lot of shopping when you arrive to open up the other house. I have to move an āofficeā as well.
We start preparing for the next change-over the day after a move. Some things are better in each country, so we transport them. Would you believe it, we take our plastic food storage bags from Australia? I know that sounds silly, but theyāre so much better. And the Aussies have a truly efficient opener for glass jars of food - weāve taken several over as presents for family in the UK. We bring things from the UK as well. I love Marks & Spencer underclothes, for instance, and they have much nicer skirts in the UK. I could go on - and on - but you get the idea. Itās amazing what details make life pleasanter.
The flight itself takes 20 hours and is exhausting. I simply cannot sleep on planes, even in business class. It takes me two and a half novels to get through that flight. And about one flight in eight there are problems and delays, so we have to hang around airports or even spend a night somewhere as a new plane is brought. I consider flying the price I pay for a wonderfully rich life.
We both have family in the UK, a sister each above all, and Daveās mother is still alive at 92. Itās been wonderful reconnecting with our siblings and their children. Iāve even forgiven my nieces for turning me into a great-aunt. (Doesnāt that sound old? How dare they?) And then thereās research and PR and business with my three UK publishers. Lots to do in each country.
MJP: Youāre a very prolific writer, usually doing three fairly lengthy novels a years. You refer to yourself as a writing addict. Could you tell us more about that? (And if itās contagious, where can I catch it?!!)
AJ: Iām very lucky. I was born without the housekeeping gene, so donāt waste my time on ironing and dusting, and have always paid someone else to do the housework. I focus on what I love most - telling stories. Iām not robust physically, because I have a bad back, Iāve never been good at sport anyway (pitiful, actually) and I donāt enjoy travelling, so what does that leave? Writing or as I think of it, story telling. Oh, and reading, too. I read at least three novels a week.
Iāve found I can write a better story if I push myself on as quickly as possible, then polish it carefully afterwards, so thatās how I work. After 57 novels published, Iām getting faster.
And then there are the characters. Itās partly their fault that I write a lot of stories. Characters from my next book come and haunt me in the half-awake time just before dawn and show me scenes from their stories, demanding to have the story told now, this minute. So I have to hurry up and finish the current book. Thatās my excuse anyway.
Oh, and donāt forget the lovely readers, who want more than three novels a year and write me delightful emails. I canāt do more than three, though. I have a life outside writing and like to spend the evenings with my own personal hero, our daughters and our grandson. And anyway, my imagination fades as the sun sets, I donāt know why.
Really, my life is like anyone elseās. I work hard and thatās how I produce the books.
Iād like to thank Mary Jo and the Word Wenches for having me on their blog. What a great bunch of writers they are! I hope youāve found my views of the world interesting. You can find more information on my website at http://www.annajacobs.com
Happy reading!
MJP: Anna, thanks so much for visiting us and broadening our view of historical novels!
Anna will give a copy of The Trader's Wife to someone who comments between now and midnight Tuesday, so comment away! Feel free to ask questions about the sorts of books Anna writes. (But she's on the other side of the world, so she'll be checking in at different times from those of us in this hemisphere!)
Mary Jo