Author: Helen Smith
ISBN: 9780956517036
Page count: 224
Genre: Literary fiction
Price: £7.99/$12.99
Author Bio:
Helen Smith travelled the world when her daughter was small, doing all sorts of strange jobs to support them both – from cleaning motels to working as a magician’s assistant – before returning to live in London where she wrote her first novel. She writes novels, poetry, plays and screenplays. She’s a long-term supporter of the Medical Foundation for the Victims of Torture and mentors members of an exiled writers group to help them tell their stories. She is also a participating author in Operation Ebook Drop. She has a blog: http://helensmithblog.blogspot.com.
Tell us about your book:
Being Light is a comedy about a man who is swept away on a freak gust of wind while installing a bouncy castle in a park in South London. When he doesn’t come home, his wife hires a private detective to find him. Some of the characters from my first book, Alison Wonderland, pop up in this one, too – though it can be read as a standalone book.
How long did it take to write the book?
I wrote it over a period of about a year. I was working part-time and bringing up my daughter. Most days I didn’t write anything at all.
What inspired you to write the book?
I wanted to write a witty book set in London, featuring strong, interesting female characters. I lived in Australia for a while when my daughter was young and I remember reading about a man who flew about five feet into the air while installing a bouncy castle in a park. I wondered what would happen if he didn’t come back down again.
Talk about the writing process. Did you have a writing routine? Did you do any research, and if so, what did that involve?
I had two days off a week, Thursday and Friday, and I tried to write a thousand words a day on my writing days. Unfortunately, I often found that people would interrupt me – or I would allow myself to be interrupted, saying, ‘It’s OK. I’m only writing…’ Still, I got it finished and I’m very pleased with it.
What do you hope your readers come away with after reading your book?
I hope that the book will make them laugh, and they’ll find the book thought-provoking as well as entertaining. I hope they’ll enjoy it enough to want to look out for the other books I have written.
Where can we go to buy your book?
The book is available in all the usual outlets – both the chain and independent book stores as well as online from Amazon and Barnes & Noble. For those with ereaders, Being Light also available in digital format in the kindle store at Amazon.com, at Mobipocket and direct from Tygerbooks.co.uk.
Any other links or info you’d like to share?
I’d love you to come and say hello at my blog: http: //helensmithblog.blogspot.com
Excerpt from book:
Roy Travers and his friend Brian Donald begin setting up the bouncy castle in Brockwell Park early in the morning, while the light is still weak and they are only half awake. It’s a very windy day in late April, with a light drizzle forecast for this afternoon, but they and the other volunteers are expecting a large crowd to turn out from midday to raise money for St Thomas’s Hospital Scanner Appeal.
The bouncy castle, lent to them for the occasion by a local business, is the star attraction for the younger children, together with the pony rides. It is very shiny, made from an expensive prototype material of the kind that is primarily used in modern metallic stay-fresh crisp packets.
‘Funny weather for a Fun Day,’ says Brian, who has no gift for observational humor. Roy ignores him, crouched inside the bouncy castle at the back, patting and smoothing the walls to make sure it is inflated correctly. The inflation is just right. They have made the walls and the turrets of the castle fat and sausagey without putting a strain on the material.
Brian hunches over a Silk Cut Ultra Mild with his disposable lighter, his back turned against the wind, hoping to reward himself with a quick smoke before checking that the guy ropes are secure. His wife doesn’t like him smoking. She was the one who told the Hospital Fundraising Committee he would be prepared to spend his day off buggering about with the bouncy castle, so he doesn’t feel too bad.
The wind nudges the castle. The ground is soft because it has been raining. The metal pegs slide from the earth like hungry fingers through custard. The castle bumps an inch or two along the ground, trailing the guy ropes. Unheeding, Brian flicks at his lighter and makes a windshield for the cigarette with the lapel of his jacket, turning his back one way and then another against the intensifying wind, whipping around him from all directions.
With the persistence and strength of an elephant moving tree trunks in the jungle, the wind produces a fierce, blowing burst that transforms the anchorless castle into a flying craft, Roy Travers its only passenger.








July 27, 2010
Thanks for posting this, Greg. It was a pleasure to take part in the Q&A.