#HNSIndie |
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Josa Young |
Throughout April I have invited 26 authors who had been selected as Editor's Choice by the Historical Novel Society Indie Reviews
to help me out with the 2016 A-Z Blog Challenge...
Except to be a little different I interviewed
their leading Character/s...
Today's Character is
from :
HH :
Hello! I believe you exist in Josa Young's novel – what is
the title of the book, and would you like to introduce yourself - who you are,
what you do etc?
I live
and have my being in Sail Upon the Land. My name is Lady Sarah Reeves (nee
Bourne) – I never use my title though. I’m plain Mrs Reeves, the doctor’s wife
to you. I was brought up in a crumbling Victorian house in Sussex, England,
which my parents were running as a sort of disorganised rooming house by the
time I was born. My great grandfather’s fortune, made from a coloured raising
agent for bread that he had invented, had long since been squandered. My own
father looked, smelt and in fact was, a farmer. My mother, who came originally
from Penge as a refugee from the Zeppelins, spent most of her time lying on a
sofa as something had gone wrong with her 'underneath' from having too many
babies. I was the only girl, and had three brothers. It used to make me angry
that they were favoured over me, and I longed for freedom and fun. Then the war
came, and I was able to avoid being a debutante and instead volunteered as a
VAD – well that led to meeting my beloved Arthur, and a very happy marriage.
Like all lives, there were great sadnesses as well as happiness, and my
daughter Melissa’s death nearly destroyed me. Only the existence of her
daughter Damson stopped me from giving up all hope. Life goes on, and family
love is the most important thing of all.
HH : Where and when are you? Are you a real
historical person or did your author create you?
I was
born in 1920, in Sussex. I am not at all a real person, I only exist in Sail
Upon the Land. Possibly I represent the kind of resilient woman whose life was
profoundly changed by the social shake up of WWII.
HH. In a
few brief sentences: what is the novel you feature in about?
Sail Upon the Land
is about motherhood. How right and wrong it can go down the generations, and
how giving birth opens us up to unimaginable grief and joy. ‘Sail Upon the
Land’ is a quotation from Titania’s speech about the mother of her little
Indian boy – the catalyst for the plot of Midsummer Night’s Dream - and a
visual metaphor for the pregnant tummy swelling like a sail. The novel, which
is set in India and England, tries to capture what it means to be a mother,
even if you have died or your baby is taken away. It has been described as ‘unveiling the complexities of motherhood and feminine experience, something which is rarely written in such a raw and true way’.
House in Ooty, India |
HH : I ‘met’ my pirate, Jesamiah Acorne on a beach
in Dorset, England - how did your author
meet up with you?
I don’t
know. I think I just popped into her head as she thought about mothers.
HH : Tell
me about one or two of the other characters who feature with you - husband,
wife, family? Who are some of the nice characters and who is the nastiest one?
My
husband Arthur Reeves is someone I would never have met without WW2 and the
mixing of the classes that it set off. He is a lovely man, an excellent doctor.
He welcomed the NHS with open arms after the war, and was well known for being
firm with his patients. If he was nice to them, that was when they got
frightened. He did try so hard always to be the same, firm and brisk, but he
was so compassionate.
My
daughter Melissa was always a worry. She was such a moody child. She used to
have what we called in the family her ‘glooms’, when she would want to sit on
my lap even when she was a teenager. We were sure she would grow out of them,
when happily married and settled. She didn’t…
I never
knew what to make of my son-in-law Munty. He seemed such a shy man, but he did
his best to bring up his daughter Damson on his own. Then he married that awful
woman from Nottingham, Margaret. So brassy, rich and bossy. Completely took him
over and I worried that she wasn’t nice to Damson, although I would never have
said that out loud. She had twin daughters, very beautiful, but rather shallow.
Still, life is long and things change.
And
Damson, my poor darling grand-daughter, with her terrible secret. She so longed
to follow in Arthur’s footsteps as a doctor, but what a price she paid.
HH : What
is your favourite scene in the book?
I like
the scene where I confront the Nazi officer who tried to commandeer my
ambulance during the retreat to Dunkirk. I am afraid to say I was so angry that
I slapped him very hard, which was nearly the death of me. But not quite.
HH : What
is your least favourite? Maybe a frightening or sad moment that your author
wrote.
I can
hardly bear to think about it, but it concerns my daughter Melissa and what
happened after Damson was born. I still feel so guilty that I was too ill to go
and look after her.
HH : What
are you most proud of about your author?
In spite
of a very enthusiastic agent, the book didn’t sell to a mainstream publisher
even though her first novel One Apple Tasted was published in 2009. So she
decided to publish it herself and learned everything there was to know about
paperback and ebook publication in a very short time. When the Historical Novel
Society long-listed it for their Indie Award 2016, I felt very proud and she
felt very justified.
HH : Has
your author written other books about
you? If not, about other characters?
How do
you feel about your author going off with someone else!
Her first
novel contains a very different set of characters, but I do have a walk-on role
in the sequel to Sail Upon the Land which is coming soon.
HH : As a
character if you could travel to a time and place different to your own
fictional setting where and when would
you go?
I am
firmly lodged in my own setting, and so relieved that I lived at a time when women’s
lives were expanding out of the usual class norms. I would have hated being a
debutante, and loved working at a nurse.
Thank you
that was really interesting!
Now where
can readers of this A-Z Blog Challenge find out more about you and your author?
Website
www.josayoungauthor.com
Twitter
@JosaYoung
Here is the company we will be
keeping on this
A-Z Blog Challenge!
APRIL
A 1st Friday
- Aurelia - Alison Morton
B 2nd Saturday - Bloodie Bones - Lucienne Boyce
C 4th
Monday - Man in the Canary Waistcoat Susan Grossey
D 5th
Tuesday - Dubh-Linn - James Nelson
E 6th
Wednesday - Evergreen In Red And White - Steven Kay
F 7th
Thursday - Fortune’s Fool- David Blixt
G 8th
Friday - Gift For The Magus - Linda Proud
H 9th
Saturday - The Love Letter of John Henry Holliday - Mary Fancher
I 11th
Monday - In Liberty’s Wake - Alexandra Norland
J 12th
Tuesday - Jacobites' Apprentice - Dave McCall
K 13th
Wednesday - Khamsin- Inge Borg
L 14th
Thursday - Luck Bringer - Nick Brown
M 15th
Friday - Murder at Cirey - Cheryl Sawyer
O 18th
Monday - Out
Of Time - Loretta Livingstone
P 19th
Tuesday - Pirate Code - Helen Hollick
Q 20th
Wednesday - To Be A Queen – Annie Whitehead
R 21st
Thursday - The Spirit Room - Marschel Paul
S 22nd
Friday - Sower Of The Seeds Of Dreams - Bill Page
T 23rd
Saturday -Tristan & Iseult - Jane Dixon Smith
U 25th
Monday - A Just And Upright Man - John Lynch
V 26th
Tuesday - Victoria Blake – Far Away
W 27th
Wednesday - When Sorrows Come - Maria Dziedzan
X 28th
Thursday – The FlaX flower – AmandaMaclean
Y 29th
Friday - Young,Josa - Sail upon The Land
Z 30th
Saturday OZgur Sahin The Wrath of Brotherhood
So call back tomorrow
(unless it is Sunday - in which case, see you Monday)
To meet the next - and sadly, the last -
exciting Character!
exciting Character!
Great interview. I think the social changes that came about for women during the Second World War are fascinating. It must have been incredibly hard for those women who had enjoyed those changes to then give up their jobs to the men as they returned from war. Which part of India is the book set in?
ReplyDeleteHow brave of you to have slapped a Nazi officer, Sarah. I think many people would have applauded you for that.
ReplyDeleteAn interesting look across the generations.
I agree Victoria. The social landscape for women changed drastically during WWII stateside as well. One of my grandmothers worked in an airplane factory during the war and in the 1950’s, after her youngest started off to school, she gained employment as a secretary. Knowing what it was to earn her own money she wasn’t content with not doing so, and though she worked outside the house she still cooked a hot breakfast and dinner everyday and did all the household chores on top of it all. She was an amazing woman.
ReplyDeleteJosa, thank you for sharing the metaphor behind your title Sail Upon The Land, it’s such beautiful imagery.
Thanks everyone for leaving a comment - it doesn't look like Josa is on line at the moment, however.
ReplyDelete