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Sunday 18 February 2018

An interview with me on Alyson Faye's Blog


Mandy Huggins photo.jpg


Interview with prize winning writer, Mandy Huggins…..

 

You can find the full interview, and access Aly's blog from here





Could you tell us a little more about yourself and how you got started as an author?

Apart from good wine and good company, my three passions in life are writing, reading, and travel. I inherited a love of travel from my parents, so as well as being a fiction author, I’m a keen travel writer.
My first writing success was winning third prize in the school literary competition when I was eleven, with a poem about George Best! And my first serious rejection was an erotic story I wrote for the Sunday Sport in the early 90s. It came back with ‘Good writing, but too dirty. Ed.’ scrawled across the top in blue pencil!
I started writing seriously a few years ago. The first pieces I wrote were for specific competitions, as I found the deadlines were a useful incentive. I sent a travel piece to the Daily Telegraph every single week until they published me!
I have a full-time day job in engineering, so I write in the evenings and at weekends. My partner writes too – a very popular niche music blog – so we both understand each other’s need for creative space!

Which writers have influenced you? Or whose books do you particularly enjoy reading?

My fiction is influenced by many of the great writers that I love – such as Yoko Ogawa, Helen Dunmore, Ernest Hemingway, Richard Ford, A L Kennedy, Helen Simpson, John Steinbeck, Tessa Hadley, Patti Smith, Colm Toibin, A M Homes, Kazuo Ishiguro – the list is endless!
There are many books I would love to have written, such as The Siege by Helen Dunmore, The Housekeeper & the Professor by Yoko Ogawa, The Old Man and the Sea by Hemingway, or the wonderful Jane Eyre. But the one that stands out for me is The Remains of the Day by Kazuo Ishiguro. I love all his books, but this is my favourite. It is so beautifully written. A story of a life lost to duty; unsentimental and utterly heartbreaking. A masterpiece.

The Remains of the Day

Where do you get your ideas from for your stories?

My stories are occasionally inspired by personal experiences, and the settings are often places I have explored on my travels. I was brought up on the North Yorkshire coast, and so the sea appears as a major character in a lot of my work as well.
However, most of my main story ideas come straight from my imagination, often sparked by something observed or overheard. Sometimes the starting point will be a newspaper story, or a single scene from a film that inspires me to create a completely new story or an alternative ending.

Writing is a solitary business. How do you interact with other authors?

I’m a member of my local writing group, as well as several on-line groups for fiction and travel writers, all of which are very supportive. Authors I’ve met on-line have become real life friends, and I try to meet up with them a few times a year. Harrogate Crime Writing Festival is one of my regular haunts, even though I’m not a crime writer, because it’s great for socialising! I do find it difficult to attend events, workshops and literature festivals, because most happen during the week when I’m working, and the majority take place in London, or other places far removed from the frozen north!

What do you have coming up in the future?

Seven of my short stories have just been published in the InkTears showcase anthology, Death of a Superhero, alongside three other writers. There was a launch party in London last year, which was very exciting.

Death of a superhero cover..


You can buy it here

And my first flash fiction collection, Brightly Coloured Horses, is out now, February 2018 - published by Chapeltown Books.

 Brightly Coloured Horses..



BRIGHTLY COLOURED HORSES

“Brightly Coloured Horses is the first flash fiction collection from award-winning author, Mandy Huggins.
Twenty-seven tales of betrayal and loss, of dreams and hopes, of lovers, liars and cheats. Stories with a strong sense of place, transporting us from the seashore to the city, from India’s monsoon to the heat of Cuba, and from the supermarket aisle to a Catalonian fiesta. We meet a baby that never existed, a car called Marilyn, a one-eyed cat, and a boy whose kisses taste of dunked biscuits.
These stories all have something in common; each is a glimpse of what it’s like to be human. We make mistakes, we do our best, and most of the time we find hope.”

It is earning ***** 5 star reviews:-

“A mind blowing collection of flash fiction stories. So many great windows of life in it, I don’t know where to start. Perfect Word – loved it. Only the Best - brilliant, but sad….”
Follow Mandy here on this link to her Amazon author page-


I would love to write a literary novel or a full length travel book, but my writing time is limited, and I can’t seem to give up the buzz of writing short fiction and travel pieces.

I am trying to find a home for my full length short story collection at the moment.* I’ve had a couple of very positive rejections, with some really useful feedback, so I’m still optimistic!

*News update on that last paragraph -  Mandy has signed with Retreat West to publish her short story collection – Separated from the Sea.

2 comments:

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