Love At First Flight by Tess Woods
Published by: HarperCollins
Publication date: April 1st 2015
Genres: Adult, Contemporary,
Published by: HarperCollins
Publication date: April 1st 2015
Genres: Adult, Contemporary,
Looking back on it now, I can
see it was instant. The second we locked eyes. Boom. Just like that.
The me I had spent a lifetime perfecting began its disintegration from
that moment. And despite the carnage it brought to all our lives, I
still don’t regret it.
What would you risk to be with the love of your life? And what if your soul mate is the one who will destroy you?
Mel is living the dream. She’s a successful GP, married to a charming anaesthetist and raising a beautiful family in their plush home in Perth. But when she boards a flight to Melbourne, she meets Matt and her picture perfect Stepford life unravels as she falls in love for the first time ever.
What begins as a flirty conversation between strangers quickly develops into a hot and obsessive affair with disastrous consequences neither Mel nor Matt could have ever seen coming. Mel’s dream life turns into her worst nightmare.
Love at First Flight will take everything you believe about what true love is and spin it on its head.
What would you risk to be with the love of your life? And what if your soul mate is the one who will destroy you?
Mel is living the dream. She’s a successful GP, married to a charming anaesthetist and raising a beautiful family in their plush home in Perth. But when she boards a flight to Melbourne, she meets Matt and her picture perfect Stepford life unravels as she falls in love for the first time ever.
What begins as a flirty conversation between strangers quickly develops into a hot and obsessive affair with disastrous consequences neither Mel nor Matt could have ever seen coming. Mel’s dream life turns into her worst nightmare.
Love at First Flight will take everything you believe about what true love is and spin it on its head.
Interview With The Author
What
inspired you to write Love at First Flight?
I've
always been inspired by the tragic love story, the story of great
love that just can't be. My favourite book The Bridges of Madison
County stayed with me years after reading it and played on my mind.
Then I read Twilight and out of nowhere I had to write my own book.
Before this I had never entertained the idea of writing. But the
longing in Twilight and the knowing that the one you love is the one
that is dangerous for you resonated with me and I just had to write
about that. So with the themes of desire and danger, I wrote a book
about a married mother, because I wanted to write of what I know. I
wanted to bring the great love story into the world of the typical
suburban mum who is chasing after kids, working and running a home. I
wanted her to have that Romeo and Juliet moment. So I wrote 'Love at
First Flight'.
Did
you use real events/people from your own life as inspiration when
writing Love at First Flight?
Hell
yes! I really do believe you write what you know. Of course the novel
is a novel, not a biography, and I credit my imagination for it, but
I have definitely taken inspiration from events and people in my
life.
It
is no coincidence that Mel has long black hair and is a health
professional who falls for a tall, dark, handsome and broody, moody
physio. That’s me and my husband! But the great thing about writing
is that I get to make Mel as hot as I like and morph her into someone
as sexy as Angelina Jolie - hey, it’s my prerogative isn’t it?
Matt’s parents are very much inspired by own mother and father
in-law who lived out in the country on a sprawling property where we
used to go to wind down from the city with them. Matt’s sister is a
powerful human rights lawyer, just like two of my world-beating
cousins. I even used my children’s names for characters - Tom, Lara
and Lachlan. (Lara has a blink and you miss it part because I am
saving her. I have big things planned for Lara in book two!)
And
I incorporated many real life events into this fictional story. My
husband and I tragically lost our third child Lachy at birth, my
darling friend Jess committed suicide, my darling friend Julie fought
a fierce battle with cancer and those stories and a few more events
that shaped my life made it into the book. Writing was my
counselling!
Also,
I am inherently lazy so the fact that the story unfolds in Perth and
Melbourne, the two cities I’ve lived in most of my life, is not by
accident. The more you know, the less you research. Some writers
thrive on research, me – not so much!
What
is the best advice you were given for writing?
The
wonderful writer Nikki Davies who assessed the manuscript in the
early days, told me to imagine every scene as a scene on a stage. The
curtain opens- What do you see? What should the audience feel? What
are the actors saying and how do they move around? What expressions
are on their faces and in their voices? Start the scene with an
opening and end it with closure. Do this for every single scene in
the book. Once I learnt to write in scene like this, my writing
changed dramatically and it became more authentic and palpable.
More
recently, when we were doing the copyedit of Love at First Flight,
the brilliant author Dianne Blacklock taught me the concept of
Chekhov’s gun, one of her favourite writing tips, which is now one
of mine too. Chekhov himself advised, “Remove everything that has
no relevance to the story. If you say in the first chapter that there
is a rifle hanging on the wall, in the second or third chapter it
absolutely must go off. If it's not going to be fired, it shouldn't
be hanging there.” This helped cut a lot of excess junk from my
writing which was clogging it up.
How
long did Love at First Flight take to write?
The
story was written start to finish in six days. For real. But it was a
mashed up piece of drivel! It took eighteen months and five complete
re-writes with the help of two manuscript assessors who kept
suggesting changes and sending it back to me before I felt confident
enough to send it to literary agents.
What
do you hope readers will take from your book?
More
than anything I want my readers to be entertained. I want them to
escape whatever they are doing and join Mel and Matt in their story.
I want readers to be thinking about Mel and what direction her life
will take when they have to leave her to get on with their real
lives, and I want them to be happy to re-unite with her again when
they pick up the book. I’m not out to challenge anybody and I don’t
have a world-changing message for anybody. I simply want to
entertain. When readers finish Love at First Flight, I would hope
they are satisfied and that it captured their imagination.
Which
Hollywood stars would you like to see play the lead roles in the
movie version of your book?
Hugh
Jackman is the ultimate Adam, Orlando Bloom (with an Aussie accent)
would make a convincing Matt, Rose Byrne (with dyed black hair) has
Mel written all over her. Nobody gets to make a movie though unless
my daughter Lara gets to be Lily.
What
do you love the most about the main character in your book?
I
love that Mel is raw. She is openly vulnerable and tortured and she
desperately needs attention. I want to help her dig her way out of
the hole she is in and help her find inner peace and happiness.
Why
do you write?
Because
if I didn’t I would need to be institutionalised. What else would I
do with these people in my head if I couldn’t write their stories?
What
tricks do you have to beat writer’s block?
I
write anyway, even if it’s a pile of pigeon poop, I write it.
Writer’s block eventually passes, and then I have something on
paper and whether I keep what I wrote or not is irrelevant. Even if I
go back and delete those pigeon droppings, I know that writing those
words has led me to explore new ideas anyway. I never regret writing
when I don’t feel inspired. In fact I’m always happy that I did.
Do
you write with a plan or do you see where the story takes you?
I
wrote Love at First Flight with no plan whatsoever. Often I would
read over what I just wrote and be surprised that the story had gone
in a new direction that I would never have expected. With the book I
am writing now, Flat White with One, I am working with a plan. I
think I prefer winging it and seeing what happens.
Do
you write every day?
When
I am writing or editing, yes I do. However I tend to be hot and cold.
I will write for four hours a night for a month to get a draft
written or to do an edit and once it’s done I will ignore it for
another month or two before picking up the manuscript again to
re-work it.
Do
you have a day job? What is it?
Yes,
I’m a physiotherapist and have been for the past twenty years. I
love my day job working in private practice. Every Tuesday I run
exercise classes for the over 75s, we always finish with a dance
number like the Hokey Cokey or the Macarena, best job ever.
What
is the best marketing tip you can share for a new author to get their
book noticed?
Be
forward even if you are shy. Take on an alter ego, the author who is
passionate enough about her book that she will be brave enough to
tell the world how great it is. My friend Steph Pegler gave me this
little gem: ‘Nobody except maybe your mum is out there waiting for
your book. You need to make people notice you.’
What
is your favourite motivational phrase or quote?
Lisa
Vanderpump said “Throw me to the wolves and I shall return leader
of the pack.” I love that!
Which
famous person living or dead would you most like to meet and why?
Hmm,
I should say Nelson Mandela or the Dalai Lama, that would make me
look smart and worldly wouldn’t it? Truth is, give me George
Clooney. Why? I think it’s pretty obvious J.
When
did you realise you wanted to be a writer?
I
wanted to be a writer when I first learnt to write, but the dream got
lost as I performed well at school and was encouraged to go down a
health science route. I followed protocol, not instinct and forgot
about writing. The desire to write lay dormant for a good twenty
years but once that sleeping volcano erupted, boy did it erupt!
What
do you think makes a really good story?
A
story where stuff happens on every page. A story where you don’t
flip ten pages at a time to get to the next good bit.
How
did you come up with the title?
I
didn’t! I came up with Flight. But I got a memo from my editor,
Anna, that Flight could be about birds or kites and she wanted
something that sold the story more. I received that email while I was
having lunch with my friend Emma on her birthday. I complained and
moaned about needing to change the title. Emma came up with Love at
First Flight. I emailed Anna. She thought I was a genius. I happily
took the credit!
How
do you make the time to write?
I
don’t. I’m truly hopeless at making time to write. I start
writing at around 10 pm and live on very little sleep through the
whole writing process. Don’t use me as a role model on time
management!
Pick
one series and tell us why – Harry Potter, Twilight or The Hunger
Games.
Twilight.
Not even a competition in my mind. Edward- ugh, he kills me, he is so
perfect!
Do
you take negative reviews of your book personally or do you shrug
them off?
I
cry. I totally cry.
How
did you come up with the idea for the cover?
I
didn’t! The wonderful team at HarperCollins did and I was so
excited to see my beautiful cover that I cried.
Is
it part of a series or is it a stand-alone novel?
It’s
a stand alone book, however Mel’s son, Nick, becomes an adult and
tells his story in my next book Flat White With One.
Where
is the novel set and why did you choose to set it there?
The
novel is set in Perth and in Melbourne. These two Australian cities
are where I have lived for most of my life so I know them really well
and could easily create scenarios in recognisable places. I am
parochial about Perth, especially our stunning coast line, since
moving here twelve years ago, so I was happy at the excuse to gloat
about it. Also, being inherently lazy when it comes to research,
setting the book in Perth and Melbourne, meant that I had much less
research to do!
What
made you want to become an author?
I
didn’t plan on being an author, I was quite happily minding my own
business being a physiotherapist. But these characters in my head
refused to go away so I had to write their story.
Tess
Woods is a health professional who lives in Perth, Australia with one
husband, two children, one dog and one cat who rules over all of
them. Love at First Flight is her first novel. When she isn’t working or
being a personal assistant to her kids, Tess enjoys reading and all
kinds of grannyish pleasures like knitting, baking, drinking tea,
watching Downton Abbey and tending to the veggie patch.
(1) ebook copy of Love At First Flight.
Open internationally.
Contest Ends May 5th, 2015.
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