Please welcome UK author Tamar Cohen who is here today chatting about her newest US release, War of Wives. Her US publisher Harlequin/Mira has graciously offered one copy of the novel US and Canada only for a Giveaway, details below.
Enjoy the conversation!
- ISBN-13: 9780778317487
- Publisher: Harlequin
- Publication date: 1/27/2015
- Pages: 384
Overview
Think marriage means happily-ever-after? Think again
Selina and Lottie are complete opposites. Where Selina is poised but prudish, Lottie is quirky and emotional. Selina is the dutiful mother of three children and able manager of their stylish suburban home. Lottie lives with her eccentric teenage daughter in a small city apartment fit to bursting with color and happy chaos. But these women also have one shocking similarity: they're married to the same man
and they've just found out he's dead.
Harlequin/Mira is offering one print copy of
War of Wives
US & Canada only
please use the Rafflecopter form below to enter
Thanks Harlequin
Good Luck!
War of Wives
US & Canada only
please use the Rafflecopter form below to enter
Thanks Harlequin
Good Luck!
Read an Excerpt:
SELINA
Flora is perched on the kitchen table, her big blue eyes following me around the room. She has just finished a very long-winded story about a party she and Ryan went to where Ryan was the only person who refused to wear fancy dress. Ryan thinks fancy dress is "gay," apparently. Give me strength! I maintain a diplomatic silence. I've discovered that's the best way of dealing with the matter of my daughter's inappropriate boyfriend. If I were to voice an opinion—that he has all the charm of a dead haddock, for instance—she'll go back to giving me the sanitized PR version of Ryan—the Dear Leader version, as Simon calls it—like she did in the beginning when it became obvious what Simon and I thought of him. At least this way I get to hear the truth, even if the price is that I have to swallow my own tongue at times.
So I nod and murmur appreciatively and start wondering—oh, the guilt—how soon I'll be able to switch her off.
That's the problem with using Skype. You can never get away. There's some old friend or family member on the screen on your table, or the arm of the sofa, and you've had a lovely chat, but you're now running out of things to say, and because they can see everything that's going on, you can't invent a saucepan boiling over, or a ring at the door or any of the normal things that end a conversation. So there's an awkward pause while you come up with something else to say and try to stop yourself thinking about the million and one things you really ought to be getting on with.
The other problem with Skype is—and I know this makes me sound as if I come from the Jurassic era—that you can see the other person. The other day I was thinking about how Simon and I never use Skype, even though he's always away. Of course, that's partly to do with us both being so ridiculously busy, but really, I realized, it's more to do with the business of sitting there looking at each other. Even though we've been married all these years, it made us both uncomfortable the couple of times we tried it. It's so intimate. When we first got together, we used to spend hours sitting across from each other in cafés and pubs, playing with each other's feet under the table while we put the world to rights, but what couple who've been married nearly thirty years still gazes into each other's eyes when they talk? There's something unnatural about it. Awkward. I found myself focusing on the collar of his shirt or the wayward lock of hair he kept smoothing back with his hand.
I don't actually want to be able to see the people I'm talking to. It's distracting. While Flora launches into yet another long-winded story, I'm looking at her frizz of hair and thinking (yet again) how much better it would look if she had it cut. Nothing extreme. Just a little bit of shaping. And I'm looking at her desk in the architectural firm where she works as a PA and noticing, with a bit of a wince, that she has some kind of cuddly toy on there (no doubt bought by Ryan in a petrol station somewhere), and I'm looking at her clothes and wanting to cut through her story and shout "Color block!" or "Texture!" or "Layering!" or any of the stupid things overbearing mothers want to say to their grown-up daughters but don't dare. It's a kind of maternal Tourette's, I suppose.
Instead, I tell her I have to be getting to the gym. This isn't technically a lie. I do have a class. Flora doesn't need to know it doesn't actually start for another hour and a half. Then we have that awkward Skype goodbye moment where neither of us wants to be the first to click Disconnect. Silly, isn't it? It ought to be a straightforward technological act. Lean forward, press, gone. Yet it feels like an emotional rejection. At the gym, I try to concentrate.
"Into the half moon. And ho-old
"
While my body obediently contorts itself as instructed by the new rather Germanic instructor of Hatha Yoga (Advanced Wednesdays), my mind keeps itself busy.
1. Book Pierre's for Book Club Christmas lunch (just let them try to tell me there aren't any tables left, in September!)
2. Research printers for Simon's study. Criminal, those ink cartridge prices.
3. Ring around for history tutor recommendations. Surely one of the other mothers must know someone, preferably someone who doesn't smell of weed like the last one.
Starting to ache now. I shoot a glance at the mirror that runs the length of the studio wall in front of me, surreptitiously comparing myself with the rest of the class. Body straight, arm stretched. Not bad, as long as you overlook the slight sheen on my forehead. So unforgiving, those overhead lights, even after two sessions of Botox and a discreet dermal filler (not that I'd ever admit those to anyone). But when you consider I probably have a good ten years on most of the women here, I think I'm doing okay. But I don't like to think in terms of age. So counterproductive. And so bloody depressing!
4. Call Lorenzo, and make sure he has the revised flight times. Oh, and get him to stack the firewood in the main living room. Not much use to us outside the back door. Not with Simon's back. Which reminds me.
5. Make appointment with chiropractor.
6. Email that friend of Hettie's about the Cricket Club fundraising quiz questions. No soap opera questions this time, please, God!
7. Send out Tweet about the Book Club lunch. Mustn't forget!
Ouch. I don't actually gasp out loud, but my arms are starting to feel the strain. Sadist, this instructor. Some of the other women have already collapsed in a heap on their mats. Stamina. That's the thing. You can have a twenty-five-year-old body, but if you have no stamina, you might as well give up.
"And straight into the upward-facing dog."
In my head I hear Josh's voice mutter, "You're an upward-facing dog," and I can't help smiling. Internally, obviously. Such a worry, that boy, even at seventeen, but he can still make me laugh. The other day I asked him to unload the dishwasher, and he muttered under his breath, "You'rea dishwasher," and we both looked at each other crossly and then laughed like drains. Not funny in the slightest, now I think about it, but somehow it was at the time.
"Come on, ladies, stretch those necks, lengthen those backs."
The instructor has very muscly calves, I notice as I stretch and lengthen like crazy. (Even at fifty-one I retain a ridiculous compunction to please. I can criticize the instructor till the cows come home, but it doesn't stop me craving her approval. Go figure, as my friend Hettie would say.) She makes her rounds of the class, tucking in chins and pulling back shoulders. She could be a pretty girl if it wasn't for those calves, but I don't think men really like that kind of thing, do they? All that gristle. It's so important to know where to draw the line. I think so anyway. I know I'm probably not best qualified to know what men want, having been married for so long, but you don't have to be actively engaged in the business of men to appreciate what they do and don't like. It's like our villa in Tuscany—I'm not looking to sell it, but I still like to know what's happening in the Italian property market. It's a question of being prepared for every eventuality. I know there are some people who believe being prepared spoils things, takes away from the spontaneity of life. The same people who love surprise parties, probably. Personally, I can't think of anything worse. What if you had on a dress you'd always loathed, one of those "fat dresses," as Flora calls them, that you throw on those mornings when you wake up feeling the size of a house? (I don't actually have a fat dress myself, although I do have a couple of pairs of good quality leggings I reserve for that time of the month.) What if the person organizing the party forgot to invite the most important people or worse, invited people you couldn't stand?
After the exercise class, I get out my emergency repair kit. Little travel-size jars into which I've decanted some essential toiletries. There's something very therapeutic about the ritual of applying nice-smelling stuff on fresh cotton-wool pads. It feels useful. Practical. When I look at my reflection in the mirror of the Chelsea health club (not a cliché, whatever Simon may say—just convenient, and really not so very expensive when you work out how much use I get out of it. Not like Hettie, who jokes that when she was a member she used to pay two thousand a year for a sauna and a halfleg wax), I make sure to do it piecemeal fashion. Hair, eyebrows, upper arms. Anatomical fragments. After forty-five, you don't really want to go looking at things as a whole. That's one thing I've learned. Now I'm fifty-one, I'm finding out about the places inside yourself where you can tuck doubts away like unopened bank letters. The trick is to break everything down into its constituent parts and work through them systematically. I like to look in the health-club mirror and focus on the positives—overall shape, level of fitness, a general sense of purpose—rather than the areas where I can't compete, like youthful complexion and cut-away shoulders.
In the changing room afterward a woman compliments me on my cardigan. It's a new powder-blue one I'm rather pleased with so I ought to feel gratified, but something about this woman bothers me. Her nails, when she puts out her hand to stroke the soft cashmere, are all broken with bits of ragged flesh around them, a bit like Josh's. What kind of person chews their own skin? I used to ask Josh as a boy. Are you a cannibal? The thing he never seemed to get is that people judge a lot about a person by the state of his or her nails. Of course, he used to argue that those were the very people whose opinion he least cared about, but he'd be surprised how important those kind of things can be. My own mother taught me early on that there are few challenges in life that can't be faced more easily, secure in the knowledge of the possession of well-manicured hands and matching underwear. "It's about self-esteem," I tried to tell Josh. "That boost that comes from knowing yourself to be
in order." In order! I made him sound like a toilet! No wonder he looked at me as if I were bonkers.
"You always look immaculate," says the woman in the changing room. "It puts me to shame. I feel like a complete mess in comparison."
Oh, Lord. Clearly what I should do at this point is to disagree warmly or say something self-deprecating, but the truth is she does look a mess. She has on one of those flesh-colored thermal tops that make people look as though their upper half is encased in a surgical bandage, and a pair of faded black multipack-style knickers. I don't mean to be unkind, but obviously she has money or she wouldn't be here in the first place, so presumably she has a selection of clothes, and it seems bizarre that she must have chosen to wear that top, weighing up its relative merits this morning against some other less offensive item before deciding in its favor. So I say, "Nonsense, you look perfectly nice."
Which, as everyone knows, roughly translates to "Oh, dear God." The woman backs off sharpish after that, and I feel like giving myself a good slap. All the way home in my zippy little Fiat 500 with the red leather trim that usually cheers me up, I feel cross and out of sorts.
"Kindness costs nothing," I used to drum into my three children as they were growing up. Oh, hypocrisy, thy name is Selina Busfield!
On reflection, I should have made the cardigan situation into some kind ofjoke, only I'm so useless at jokes. Simon once told a dinner table of guests that I don't have a "talent for humor." I was in the kitchen preparing the dessert at the time, and he was holding court, rather drunkenly. He didn't know I could hear him. "Selina has many talents, but humor isn't one of them," he said.
I never told him I'd overheard. But it hurt. Those kind of throwaway remarks always do. What was that wartime slogan? Careless talk costs lives. Someone should remind Simon of that from time to time. Of how much can ride on a careless comment.
The journey home takes an age. The roads are already being dug up and repaired in preparation for the Olympics, even though it's still nearly two years away. Waste of money, if you ask me. All those new state-of-the-art stadiums. What will we do with them when it's over? Pay our gas bills with them? Prop up the euro with them? Use them to sort out the bogging mess the universities have got themselves into?
A couple strolls past as I am idling at a junction. They have their arms draped across each other's backs, hands plunged deep in each other's back pockets. They are laughing at something on a mobile phone, their faces tilted together, and I feel this sudden whoosh of longing. To be so included in someone else's world. As I watch the X of their arms against their backs recede into the distance, I suddenly feel like bursting into tears, which is most unlike me.
As I cross the river and approach the wide leafy avenues of Barnes, my bad humor persists, prompting me to notice all the irritating details I usually blot right out—the CCTV cameras sprouting like alien fruit from telegraph poles and lampposts, the custom-built, timber-clad huts that house the wheelie bins. (In Barnes, plastic is practically illegal. Christmas mornings are filled with the outraged wails of children who've been bought tasteful wooden toys instead of the garish colored ones they covet from the television ads.) Funny how, even after twenty-seven years in our home, I still navigate my way around these streets according to the properties we saw when we were house-hunting all those years ago. This road had that one that was deceptively spacious inside, but no garden to speak of; down there is that one that smelled like someone had died in it. Of course, there are the inevitable pangs of regrets also. Who could guess that street would become so desirable? If only I hadn't let Simon talk me out of taking on that structural work!
SELINA
Flora is perched on the kitchen table, her big blue eyes following me around the room. She has just finished a very long-winded story about a party she and Ryan went to where Ryan was the only person who refused to wear fancy dress. Ryan thinks fancy dress is "gay," apparently. Give me strength! I maintain a diplomatic silence. I've discovered that's the best way of dealing with the matter of my daughter's inappropriate boyfriend. If I were to voice an opinion—that he has all the charm of a dead haddock, for instance—she'll go back to giving me the sanitized PR version of Ryan—the Dear Leader version, as Simon calls it—like she did in the beginning when it became obvious what Simon and I thought of him. At least this way I get to hear the truth, even if the price is that I have to swallow my own tongue at times.
So I nod and murmur appreciatively and start wondering—oh, the guilt—how soon I'll be able to switch her off.
That's the problem with using Skype. You can never get away. There's some old friend or family member on the screen on your table, or the arm of the sofa, and you've had a lovely chat, but you're now running out of things to say, and because they can see everything that's going on, you can't invent a saucepan boiling over, or a ring at the door or any of the normal things that end a conversation. So there's an awkward pause while you come up with something else to say and try to stop yourself thinking about the million and one things you really ought to be getting on with.
The other problem with Skype is—and I know this makes me sound as if I come from the Jurassic era—that you can see the other person. The other day I was thinking about how Simon and I never use Skype, even though he's always away. Of course, that's partly to do with us both being so ridiculously busy, but really, I realized, it's more to do with the business of sitting there looking at each other. Even though we've been married all these years, it made us both uncomfortable the couple of times we tried it. It's so intimate. When we first got together, we used to spend hours sitting across from each other in cafés and pubs, playing with each other's feet under the table while we put the world to rights, but what couple who've been married nearly thirty years still gazes into each other's eyes when they talk? There's something unnatural about it. Awkward. I found myself focusing on the collar of his shirt or the wayward lock of hair he kept smoothing back with his hand.
I don't actually want to be able to see the people I'm talking to. It's distracting. While Flora launches into yet another long-winded story, I'm looking at her frizz of hair and thinking (yet again) how much better it would look if she had it cut. Nothing extreme. Just a little bit of shaping. And I'm looking at her desk in the architectural firm where she works as a PA and noticing, with a bit of a wince, that she has some kind of cuddly toy on there (no doubt bought by Ryan in a petrol station somewhere), and I'm looking at her clothes and wanting to cut through her story and shout "Color block!" or "Texture!" or "Layering!" or any of the stupid things overbearing mothers want to say to their grown-up daughters but don't dare. It's a kind of maternal Tourette's, I suppose.
Instead, I tell her I have to be getting to the gym. This isn't technically a lie. I do have a class. Flora doesn't need to know it doesn't actually start for another hour and a half. Then we have that awkward Skype goodbye moment where neither of us wants to be the first to click Disconnect. Silly, isn't it? It ought to be a straightforward technological act. Lean forward, press, gone. Yet it feels like an emotional rejection. At the gym, I try to concentrate.
"Into the half moon. And ho-old
"
While my body obediently contorts itself as instructed by the new rather Germanic instructor of Hatha Yoga (Advanced Wednesdays), my mind keeps itself busy.
1. Book Pierre's for Book Club Christmas lunch (just let them try to tell me there aren't any tables left, in September!)
2. Research printers for Simon's study. Criminal, those ink cartridge prices.
3. Ring around for history tutor recommendations. Surely one of the other mothers must know someone, preferably someone who doesn't smell of weed like the last one.
Starting to ache now. I shoot a glance at the mirror that runs the length of the studio wall in front of me, surreptitiously comparing myself with the rest of the class. Body straight, arm stretched. Not bad, as long as you overlook the slight sheen on my forehead. So unforgiving, those overhead lights, even after two sessions of Botox and a discreet dermal filler (not that I'd ever admit those to anyone). But when you consider I probably have a good ten years on most of the women here, I think I'm doing okay. But I don't like to think in terms of age. So counterproductive. And so bloody depressing!
4. Call Lorenzo, and make sure he has the revised flight times. Oh, and get him to stack the firewood in the main living room. Not much use to us outside the back door. Not with Simon's back. Which reminds me.
5. Make appointment with chiropractor.
6. Email that friend of Hettie's about the Cricket Club fundraising quiz questions. No soap opera questions this time, please, God!
7. Send out Tweet about the Book Club lunch. Mustn't forget!
Ouch. I don't actually gasp out loud, but my arms are starting to feel the strain. Sadist, this instructor. Some of the other women have already collapsed in a heap on their mats. Stamina. That's the thing. You can have a twenty-five-year-old body, but if you have no stamina, you might as well give up.
"And straight into the upward-facing dog."
In my head I hear Josh's voice mutter, "You're an upward-facing dog," and I can't help smiling. Internally, obviously. Such a worry, that boy, even at seventeen, but he can still make me laugh. The other day I asked him to unload the dishwasher, and he muttered under his breath, "You'rea dishwasher," and we both looked at each other crossly and then laughed like drains. Not funny in the slightest, now I think about it, but somehow it was at the time.
"Come on, ladies, stretch those necks, lengthen those backs."
The instructor has very muscly calves, I notice as I stretch and lengthen like crazy. (Even at fifty-one I retain a ridiculous compunction to please. I can criticize the instructor till the cows come home, but it doesn't stop me craving her approval. Go figure, as my friend Hettie would say.) She makes her rounds of the class, tucking in chins and pulling back shoulders. She could be a pretty girl if it wasn't for those calves, but I don't think men really like that kind of thing, do they? All that gristle. It's so important to know where to draw the line. I think so anyway. I know I'm probably not best qualified to know what men want, having been married for so long, but you don't have to be actively engaged in the business of men to appreciate what they do and don't like. It's like our villa in Tuscany—I'm not looking to sell it, but I still like to know what's happening in the Italian property market. It's a question of being prepared for every eventuality. I know there are some people who believe being prepared spoils things, takes away from the spontaneity of life. The same people who love surprise parties, probably. Personally, I can't think of anything worse. What if you had on a dress you'd always loathed, one of those "fat dresses," as Flora calls them, that you throw on those mornings when you wake up feeling the size of a house? (I don't actually have a fat dress myself, although I do have a couple of pairs of good quality leggings I reserve for that time of the month.) What if the person organizing the party forgot to invite the most important people or worse, invited people you couldn't stand?
After the exercise class, I get out my emergency repair kit. Little travel-size jars into which I've decanted some essential toiletries. There's something very therapeutic about the ritual of applying nice-smelling stuff on fresh cotton-wool pads. It feels useful. Practical. When I look at my reflection in the mirror of the Chelsea health club (not a cliché, whatever Simon may say—just convenient, and really not so very expensive when you work out how much use I get out of it. Not like Hettie, who jokes that when she was a member she used to pay two thousand a year for a sauna and a halfleg wax), I make sure to do it piecemeal fashion. Hair, eyebrows, upper arms. Anatomical fragments. After forty-five, you don't really want to go looking at things as a whole. That's one thing I've learned. Now I'm fifty-one, I'm finding out about the places inside yourself where you can tuck doubts away like unopened bank letters. The trick is to break everything down into its constituent parts and work through them systematically. I like to look in the health-club mirror and focus on the positives—overall shape, level of fitness, a general sense of purpose—rather than the areas where I can't compete, like youthful complexion and cut-away shoulders.
In the changing room afterward a woman compliments me on my cardigan. It's a new powder-blue one I'm rather pleased with so I ought to feel gratified, but something about this woman bothers me. Her nails, when she puts out her hand to stroke the soft cashmere, are all broken with bits of ragged flesh around them, a bit like Josh's. What kind of person chews their own skin? I used to ask Josh as a boy. Are you a cannibal? The thing he never seemed to get is that people judge a lot about a person by the state of his or her nails. Of course, he used to argue that those were the very people whose opinion he least cared about, but he'd be surprised how important those kind of things can be. My own mother taught me early on that there are few challenges in life that can't be faced more easily, secure in the knowledge of the possession of well-manicured hands and matching underwear. "It's about self-esteem," I tried to tell Josh. "That boost that comes from knowing yourself to be
in order." In order! I made him sound like a toilet! No wonder he looked at me as if I were bonkers.
"You always look immaculate," says the woman in the changing room. "It puts me to shame. I feel like a complete mess in comparison."
Oh, Lord. Clearly what I should do at this point is to disagree warmly or say something self-deprecating, but the truth is she does look a mess. She has on one of those flesh-colored thermal tops that make people look as though their upper half is encased in a surgical bandage, and a pair of faded black multipack-style knickers. I don't mean to be unkind, but obviously she has money or she wouldn't be here in the first place, so presumably she has a selection of clothes, and it seems bizarre that she must have chosen to wear that top, weighing up its relative merits this morning against some other less offensive item before deciding in its favor. So I say, "Nonsense, you look perfectly nice."
Which, as everyone knows, roughly translates to "Oh, dear God." The woman backs off sharpish after that, and I feel like giving myself a good slap. All the way home in my zippy little Fiat 500 with the red leather trim that usually cheers me up, I feel cross and out of sorts.
"Kindness costs nothing," I used to drum into my three children as they were growing up. Oh, hypocrisy, thy name is Selina Busfield!
On reflection, I should have made the cardigan situation into some kind ofjoke, only I'm so useless at jokes. Simon once told a dinner table of guests that I don't have a "talent for humor." I was in the kitchen preparing the dessert at the time, and he was holding court, rather drunkenly. He didn't know I could hear him. "Selina has many talents, but humor isn't one of them," he said.
I never told him I'd overheard. But it hurt. Those kind of throwaway remarks always do. What was that wartime slogan? Careless talk costs lives. Someone should remind Simon of that from time to time. Of how much can ride on a careless comment.
The journey home takes an age. The roads are already being dug up and repaired in preparation for the Olympics, even though it's still nearly two years away. Waste of money, if you ask me. All those new state-of-the-art stadiums. What will we do with them when it's over? Pay our gas bills with them? Prop up the euro with them? Use them to sort out the bogging mess the universities have got themselves into?
A couple strolls past as I am idling at a junction. They have their arms draped across each other's backs, hands plunged deep in each other's back pockets. They are laughing at something on a mobile phone, their faces tilted together, and I feel this sudden whoosh of longing. To be so included in someone else's world. As I watch the X of their arms against their backs recede into the distance, I suddenly feel like bursting into tears, which is most unlike me.
As I cross the river and approach the wide leafy avenues of Barnes, my bad humor persists, prompting me to notice all the irritating details I usually blot right out—the CCTV cameras sprouting like alien fruit from telegraph poles and lampposts, the custom-built, timber-clad huts that house the wheelie bins. (In Barnes, plastic is practically illegal. Christmas mornings are filled with the outraged wails of children who've been bought tasteful wooden toys instead of the garish colored ones they covet from the television ads.) Funny how, even after twenty-seven years in our home, I still navigate my way around these streets according to the properties we saw when we were house-hunting all those years ago. This road had that one that was deceptively spacious inside, but no garden to speak of; down there is that one that smelled like someone had died in it. Of course, there are the inevitable pangs of regrets also. Who could guess that street would become so desirable? If only I hadn't let Simon talk me out of taking on that structural work!
Hi Tamar, welcome to The Reading Frenzy
Thank
you. It’s a pleasure to be here.
Tell my readers a little about your newest US release
War of The Wives
The War of the Wives is the story of two very different
women, Selina and Lottie, who discover at their husbands’ funerals, that
they’ve unknowingly been married to the same man, Simon Busfield. It’s about
the journey each of those women makes from the point of that cataclysmic
discovery – how they are forced to confront the fact that everything they
thought they knew about their own lives has been a lie, and to reconstruct
their pasts and reimagine their futures in the light of this new revelation.
It’s also about the fallout of Simon’s twenty year deception on his children,
who are grieving for the father they’ve lost, while also having to negotiate
new relationships with the half brothers and sisters they never knew they had.
So it’s very much a book about family dynamics in a time of acute crisis, but
alongside this there’s a mystery element. Simon died in suspicious
circumstances, his body washed up in the River Thames. Did he commit suicide,
unable to live with the pressure of his double life as the police believe - or
was he murdered?
Tamar, this book has been compared to Liane Moriarty’s
The Husband’s Secret. Do you like being compared to your peers?
I
guess that would depend which peer! I loved The Husband’s Secret, so feel extremely
honored by any comparisons to it.
Along these same lines you’ve also received some rave
editorial reviews for War of the Wives. Do you read all the reviews, just the
good, the bad?
I
read them all - and sometimes wish I hadn’t! I know a couple of writers who
genuinely never read their Amazon or Goodreads reviews and I’d love to have
their will power, because while a great review affords you around five minutes
of joy, a crappy review can put a downer on the whole day. I’m getting better
at dealing with the negative ones though. Nowadays, instead of weeping into my
coffee/whisky, I go onto Amazon and look up the books I’ve genuinely loved and
see how many one star reviews they’ve had and remind myself that you’re never
going to please all the people, and if you do, chances are you’ve written a
pretty bland book.
Tamar you said in an earlier interview that you always
wanted to write that even as a child wrote, your words, “dire poetry” for
presents for your parents. My question is how long was your road to becoming a
novelist from those first attempts at writing to the publication of your first
novel?
My
first novel was published when I was forty-seven, so I guess you’d say the road
was pretty bloody long! Even though I always wanted to write fiction, I kind of
got sidetracked into freelance journalism and non-fiction. In a weird way, I
think having an existing career in writing might actually have made it harder
to get started in fiction than if I’d had a day job in something completely
different. Every time I’d sit down to attempt a novel, I’d feel guilty I wasn’t
writing something that would actually earn me some money. Over the years, I
started numerous novels but gave up the minute the doubts set in, paying too much
attention to that little voice saying “stop wasting time writing stuff no one
is going to want to read and get back to writing what you’re paid for.”
Was it a bumpy road or were you an instant success?
On
paper it appears pretty instant – started novel, found agent before novel was
even finished, had pre-emptive offer from publisher before novel was properly sent
out. Impressive, huh? Except for when you factor in the twenty-five years of
writing and honing and practicing and failing and trying again anyway that led
up to that point.
This is not your first novel about personal
relationships.
What’s the draw for you for this kind of writing?
The
personal is political. Who said that? Well, whoever did was exactly right. When
you come down to it, everything is about personal relationships – politics,
crime, war. Everything is about the dynamics between people, and at the heart
of that is the dynamics within families. At the risk of sounding sadistic, as a
writer, my favorite thing is to take a family or a couple or a friendship group
and confront them with some crisis or other and watch them unravel. Most of us
take our domestic set-ups and family relationships for granted, and it’s only
when they are under threat that we realize how slender are the threads they’re all
hanging by and how easily everything we think we know about ourselves and those
closest to us can crumble to dust.
Tamar do you write full time or is there a “day job”?
I
still write the odd feature for newspapers or magazines, but apart from that I
write fiction pretty much full time (or, more accurately, in my Twitter-free
time). Sometimes I still can’t believe my own luck.
Tamar I noticed doing research for this interview that
even though you’re a very connected author ie.. Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads
etc… you don’t have a website.
Why?
I’d
like to say there was some profound reasoning behind it, but actually it’s pure
laziness. It’s one of those things I keep meaning to do but somehow never get
around to. And, to be honest, I waste so much of my life lost in the black hole
of time/space that is Twitter, that I tend to steer clear of other online
commitments. Poor excuse, I know.
Tamar can you share what comes next after War of the
Wives for the US? And will you be traveling across the pond to visit at all?
My
next US publication will be The Fallout (in the UK it’s titled The Broken),
which should be coming out some time early next year. It’s a psychological
thriller about a couple who get unwillingly sucked into their best friends’
increasingly bitter divorce, with catastrophic consequences for all of them. I
don’t have any plans at present to visit the US but I’m always open to offers!
Thanks so much for taking the time to answer these
questions. Good luck with your new novel and all your future stories as well!
Thanks
so much for having me!
Tamar Cohen is the author of five novels: The Mistress's Revenge, The War of the Wives, Someone Else's Wedding, The Broken (published asThe Fallout in NA) and Dying for Christmas. Her books have been translated into several different languages. She also writes for newspapers and magazines in the UK and lives in London with her partner, three children and one badly behaved dog.
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This novel sounds captivating and intriguing. Great storyline and characters whose lives are turned upside down. What a great novel. Thanks for this great feature and giveaway. saubleb(at)gmail(dot)com
ReplyDeleteHi Traveler, thanks for the comment!
DeleteWhoa that would be quite the shock. What an interesting concept for a story. Thanks for the info!
ReplyDeleteThank you Anna, and it would be an interesting story. Here's hoping I have time to read it before it becomes a classic LOL ;)
DeleteI think it would be hard to not read reviews when they came in but I can why it would be a bad thing as well. You would definitely need to be thick skinned to read all the negative ones.
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting about this author and book today Debbie, I love a good historical every now and then. :)
Hi Ali, thanks for the comment. I agree it would totally put me in a deep depression if I had to see someone constantly dumping on my work.
DeleteOh this sounds interesting. Ya all have me curious and adding this to my list
ReplyDeleteHey Kim thanks. :)
DeleteI really enjoyed the Q&A with Tamar. I think the premise of the book sounds so very good. And both Selina and Lottie although they sound like they will be so different, maybe will have more than just that man in common.
ReplyDeleteHoldenj, Hi I am chomping at the bit to start mine. I just need more hours in the day LOL
DeleteInteresting premise. Just when you think there's nothing new out there.
ReplyDeleteI can't even begin to image how hard it must be to try to write a novel while holding a full-time job.
Thanks for sharing Debbie :)
Hey Loupe, it looks like blogger doubled your post :)
DeleteThanks for that really nice comment.
I know I really want to read this. :)
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
ReplyDeletebecause the blurb sounds interesting
ReplyDeleteThanks bn
DeleteThis is now on my TRL. I'm more then curious now and have definitely got to read it. :) You were a new Author to me until I saw you over at Goodreads.Thank you Tamar , I really enjoyed your interview.
ReplyDeleteCarol L
Lucky4750 (at) aol (dot) com
Hi Carol, thanks for the comment and the compliment :)
Delete