I'm absolutely thrilled to be helping celebrate the release of the 10th Shipyard Girls book with an interview with the author Nancy Revell. But first, lets find out what the book is about.
As the war effort gathers steam in Europe, it's all hands on deck on the home front.
Gloria is over the moon to be reunited with her sweetheart Jack. But her sons Bobby and Gordon are away with the Navy and still know nothing of their mother's divorce and new half-sister.
Rosie's squad of welders must work gruelling hours in the yard as they prepare for the Allied invasion of Normandy. All the while Rosie herself waits anxiously for news of her husband Peter, who is carrying out dangerous work as an undercover operative in France.
Meanwhile welder Dorothy has a feeling that her beau Toby is planning to pop the question when he's next on leave. But it seems that her head is being turned by someone closer to home...
It will take great strength and friendship if the shipyard girls are to weather the storms to come.
• Congratulations on the 10th
book in the Shipyard Girls series! What’s it been like writing these characters
for as long as you have?
It’s been a total joy. They’ve
also become a real part of my life. I have spent most of the past six years
thinking about them, laughing with them, crying for them, wanting to pick them
up when they fall down….. I feel lucky to have been allowed to have them all in
my life for so long.
• How have the characters changed
in your mind from when you first imagined them?
I think all of the characters
have changed – quite a few of them in ways I hadn’t expected – or wanted to. Sometimes
it’s as though I have no control over them! Helen is probably the character who
has changed the most. Initially I really wanted her to be the women’s nemesis –
but with each book she just kept becoming more of an empathetic person – although
she’s still got a hard edge to her.
• How do you approach your
writing? Do you have a tried and tested routine or ritual?
I have to be very disciplined
because I write two books a year, so I tend to go to ground for three months to
write the first draft of a book. The time around that is spent doing research
and sketching out a very rough plot outline for the book I’m about to start,
doing edits and copy edits on the book I’ve just delivered, and publicity for
the book which is just about to be published.
• The WWII time period is such a
richly detailed period of history. How did you go about researching what life
was like at this time for these amazing real life women who worked on the
Shipyards?
Initially I spent time going to
the actual places where the shipyards used to be and walking or driving around
the areas where characters lived and scenes were set. I went to the Sunderland
Museum, and looked around the local history section – not just the rooms which
had models of the various ships that had been built over the years on the Wear,
but those with displays of local artifacts, paintings and photographs. The gift
shop also had some brilliant books written by local authors and historians which
I wouldn’t have known about otherwise.
During the first few years I
managed to find some real shipyard women who were still alive, and I went to interview
them, which was invaluable. I also found a selection of audio recording on the Imperial
War Museum website which I still dip into. They were interviews carried out in
the 1980’s on women who worked in the shipyards during the Second World War in
the yards along the Wear as well as those on the Tyne. It’s wonderful hearing
their voices and tales of that time. As a writer what also fascinates is not
just what they say, but how they say it.
• What’s been your favourite
moment in the series so far?
There’s so many to choose from!
With each book there’s always one moment which really gets me – with HOME FRONT
it’s the last chapter, so I can’t tell you! You’ll have to read it and see if
you feel the same!
• Can you tell us anything about
the next book in the series?
Yes, ‘Shipyard Girls under the
Mistletoe’, which is out on September 30th and is the penultimate book in the
series, focuses on the women’s lives in the run up to Christmas 1944. Without
giving away too much of the plot, the focus is very much on Dorothy and her
love life, and on Helen and her visits to the local asylum to see her
grandmother Henrietta. Charles Havelock is also very prominent in this instalment.
He’s certainly one character who has not changed for the better – quite the
reverse – his evil seems to know no bounds…
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