I’m really excited that the second
book in my Rainbow Beauty trilogy, Strawberry Summer, is out today.
Holding the lovely chunky finished
book in my hands has got me thinking about when it was just an idea on a scrap
of paper, and about the long journey that little first thought has taken.
It’s
a journey that’s almost finished, as I’m just about to check over the
copy-edited third book, Blueberry Wishes, so I’m just a hop, skip and some fun
quiz and recipe-type endlims away from finishing the whole of Abbie’s story.
Just to fill you in, when they find
themselves penniless and about to be made homeless, Abbie, her mum and sisters
start a new life in a grotty flat in a strange town, still reeling with shock.
But then Abbie makes some lovely new friends (including the official Most
Gorgeous Boy In The World) and comes up with the idea to start a beauty parlour
in the empty shop below their flat. The book is full of family and friends’
drama, loads of business know-how, and a big helping of romance, too.
Rainbow Beauty, the beauty parlour,
and what you’d imagine was the core idea of the book, was something that came out
of my mouth while chatting to my editor on the phone. Before I knew it I found
myself going on about the family starting a business and Abbie making all the
fresh, natural products right from scratch. As she asked for more detail, I
waxed lyrical about Rainbow Beauty being a place to dream and scheme about the
future, and heal their hearts.
I’m not sure where that all came from - probably all embedded in my subconscious
after all the happy hours I’ve spent in
Lush and The Body Shop, and in front of The Apprentice – but I couldn’t wait to
get started.
So then came lots of
planning. Here are a few of the resources I used.
There were a lot of sample products,
too, but when I came to take the pic I found I’d used them all!
The lovely male
ballet dancers who work in Lush Covent Garden helped me with my research,
spending ages talking me through the products and demonstrating them on me
(which was extra-nice as I was extremely pregnant at the time and appreciated a
bit of pampering!).
I had to cost out everything for the business, find out
about permits and cosmetic testing, and best of all, invent all the Rainbow
Beauty products.
I also had to gather loads of information about the town I was
setting the books in, Totnes, including how long it takes to walk between each
location, which supermarkets were within reach and all about the surrounding
area. By the time I was calling the nearest college that offered beauty courses
to find out in detail what they covered (Abbie’s sister Saff enrols) I realised
I should probably stop the research and, you know, get on with making up the
characters and what they do and stuff.
Luckily for me, between all the
ideas that had emerged from the research and all the scribbled notes I’d
amassed from bits and pieces of thinking time (during ironing, train journeys
and dog-walking, mainly, in my case) I appeared to have that pretty much
covered.
So then I wrote up my notes and make them into scene plans (I write in
scenes rather than chapters) and worked those up. I got all my resources up on
the wall in front of my desk, so there would be no excuse to wander off in
search of a missing piece of information when I got writing.
Then I stopped for a bit. Three
months to be precise. Just for a rest before writing the book. Oh, and to have
baby Freddie and get him to sleep enough at nights so that I could function (I
was so tired I remember wailing to my husband, ‘I’ve just put my toothbrush in
the fridge, how am I supposed to write a novel??’).
But somehow that bit of my
brain still seemed to be working so with the help of Messrs’ Twining and
Cadbury I cracked on and wrote Peppermint Kiss in three months. Then came the
other two books. For those I had the luxury of a little more sleep and time,
though still with enough of a panic at deadline time to make me feel like I
have a proper job with ‘targets’ and ‘stress’.
And now Freddie is two and a half,
and the second book is out, and the third is about to go to the printers (and
the e-bookers). I’m looking at my (OK, OK, slightly stalker-ish) Rainbow Beauty wall and
realising it will soon be time to take it all down. But to be replaced with what?
I’m not feeling the call of the next
idea yet. I’m sure I will, but for now, I’m in the middle of a busy year
getting round to schools and festivals to talk about the series (all three
books are out this year). I really enjoy that so much – especially when they
crack out the cakes, as here at St Eddie’s in Liverpool.
When I even so much as think about writing another three long
novels back to back, it feels like my brain might actually explode. But I know
it will happen, or a stand-alone, or a series. I know the next idea will come
calling, and I’ll stockpile the Dairy Milk and build up another whole world
from a scribble on the back of an envelope. I love finding that first spark,
and writing and editing, and especially meeting readers and signing their
books.
I love the whole journey, and as this one isn’t over yet, I’m going to
enjoy every minute I have left of it. And I wish all of you happy reading and
writing too!
1 comment:
Kelly, you needn't worry about getting another idea. You so BRILL at whatever you do and write. You'll do fine. x
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