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Michele Gorman

BOOK FEATURE: “Festive Feast” by Michele Gorman

October 7, 2015 1 Comment

FestiveFeastCover

Michele Gorman’s FESTIVE FEAST
Three Deliciously Funny RomCom Christmas Novellas

The collection includes:

“The Reluctant Elf” – Meet Britain’s Worst Innkeeper

“Christmas Carol” – One winter wedding, two happy couples, three ex-boyfriends. And a very uncomfortable weekend

“Twelve Days to Christmas” – What if his proposal had an expiration date?

**”Festive Feast” is available now for pre-orders on Amazon (in both paperback and eBook).

FestiveFeastUSCover

Amazon – US

FestiveFeastUKCover

Amazon – UK

* * * * *

**Keep in touch with the author, Michele Gorman:

Website   Blog   Facebook   Instagram   Twitter

Filed Under: Festive Feast Collection Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Christmas, Festive Feast Collection, Michele Gorman, Romance, UK, US, Women's Fiction

Launching in the US: The Expat Diaries by Michele Gorman

March 26, 2014 Leave a Comment

The Expat Diaries: Single in the City

Michele Gorman’s romantic comedy debut, Single in the City, was a best-seller in the UK, where it was first published by Penguin, but despite being an American author, her books are less well-known in the US. We’d like to help change that!

Notting Hill Press launched Michele’s series, The Expat Diaries, in the US on March 25th, and here’s a bit about the first book.

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Take one twenty-six-year-old American, add to a two thousand year old city, add a big dose of culture clash and stir!

To think Hannah ever believed that Americans differed from Brits mainly in pronunciation, sophistication and dentistry. That’s been the understatement of a lifetime. She lands upon England’s gentle shores with no job, no friends and no idea how she’s supposed to build the life she’s dreaming of. Armed with little more than her enthusiasm, she charges headlong into London, baffling the locals in her pursuit of a new life, new love and sense of herself.

The book is available as an eBook and paperback: Amazon and Barnes & Noble!

And if you’re in the UK but missed Michele’s debut there, it’s published as Single in the City on Amazon.co.uk.

**Click HERE to visit Michele’s Amazon page!

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TwelveDaystoChristmas

Filed Under: Michele Gorman Tagged With: Books, Chick-Lit, Launching in the US: The Expat Diaries by Michele Gorman, Michele Gorman, Women's Fiction

Weightless

February 12, 2014 Leave a Comment

Book review of “Weightless”

WeightlessCoverPic

“Weightless” by Michele Gorman

Book Description:

Annabel’s not surprised when nobody recognizes her at her 10 year reunion. The spotty fat teen nicknamed AnnaBall by the school bullies is long gone. But standing on the edge of the popular crowd, she still feels like that girl. That is, until Jack, her teen crush, starts flirting with her. Much to her amusement, he has mistaken her for Christy Blake, Annabel’s chief tormenter before she moved to France in their last year.

It’s just a bit of fun at first, letting Jack believe she’s Christy. After all, he was nuts about her before she said au revoir to England. And when he asks Annabel out, the fun becomes something even more interesting. The more they date the deeper they fall for each other. So what if Annabel has to fib a little to keep up the façade?

As the lies start compounding, and she realizes that they’re falling in love, she has to tell him who she really is. But she’ll lose the love of her life if she does.

My Review:

“Weightless” by Michele Gorman was a cute and whimsical short story, (64 pages). There were a lot of twists and turns that I didn’t expect and that’s what I liked most. The end surprised me a lot, making it anything but predictable. Annabel’s (Christy’s) character was very well written and I liked her quite a bit. Jack’s character was also very intriguing, up until the very end. (Nope, no spoilers!)

If you’re looking for a quick book that you can read in a few short hours, “Weightless” is the book for you. Michele Gorman is a very talented author and I cannot wait to see what she comes up with next!

I give this book 5 stars!

*****

“WEIGHTLESS”

CHAPTER ONE

‘Ow.’ My beer bottle clinked against my teeth as I felt a hand gently grasp my shoulder from behind.

‘Oh my god, Christy, is that you? How great to see you!’

‘I’m not-’… Christy, I was about to say. But then I turned and saw whose hand it was. ‘Hi.’

‘Ten years, can you believe it?’ asked Jack as his smile threw me back to our last year in school.  ‘You look… different but I’d still recognize you anywhere. Did you come from France or are you based here now? Wait, we both need another drink and then we can have a proper catch-up.’ He pointed to my bottle. ‘Another beer? I’ll be right back. Don’t go anywhere, okay?’

He loped off to the bar where our former classmates jockeyed for the overworked barman’s attention. And I admit it, dear Reader. I ogled him. I took in his broad shoulders beneath the fitted black jacket, his long jeans-clad legs and wavy blonde mop of hair.

Jack Winslow, my unrequited love, had actually just spoken to me. He was buying my beer! … All right, so he thought he was buying Christy’s beer, but still, beggars shall not be choosy about free drinks.

When the reunion invitation arrived with the school’s annual newsletter I chucked it into the bin. Those newsletters arrived every year in December, as welcome as a urinary tract infection. They’d wheedled my mailing address from my Dad and I didn’t have the guts to ring them to opt out for fear that they’d extort me for a donation for the playing fields or something. I’d been miserable on those fields. I hated every rain-soaked blade of grass that slipped me up and each ankle-twisting rut.

Jack returned with our drinks. He set my empty bottle on a nearby table for me. ‘Cheers. To old times,’ he said.

‘Cheers. Jack Winslow, I can hardly believe it’s you. Here’s to new times, eh?’

His grin faltered, then widened. Great work, Annabel. Two minutes into the conversation is just the right time to suggest a future together.

‘Believe it,’ he said. ‘So tell me what you’ve been doing for the last decade. Are you living in London now?’

I nodded. ‘I live in Notting Hill. Well, according to the real estate agents anyway. My closest Tube is Shepherd’s Bush though. Where are you living?’

‘Well as long as we’re speaking in real estate agent, then I’m in South Hampstead. If we’re being honest then I’m off Finchley Road.’ He stared at me. There were tiny lines around his grey eyes and his lashes were darker than I remembered. ‘I’m really happy you’re here.’

I smiled, surprised that he even knew who I was. Then I remembered that he didn’t. To him I was Christy. Of course he’d be happy to see her. Christy and Jack were our school’s answer to Brangelina, though I don’t think they actually went out together. They just swanned around the school in their own golden glow, the central figures in our teenage romantic fantasies.

Jack and I stood at the edge of the room together watching the crowd. Five minutes ago I was just Annabel Markham, aka AnnaBall, Annabell-end, all-round bully fodder and soft target. Suddenly I was promoted to head of the class.

What a difference short-sightedness makes.

‘Do you wear glasses?’ I asked before taking a swig of my beer.

His brow furrowed as he hesitated. ‘Ah, well, no. Why?’

‘Oh, well, I guess I remembered you with specs, that’s all. I wasn’t implying that you need them.’ Please shut up, Annabel.

‘Oh, you mean reading glasses. Yes, I did sometimes, for my astigmatism. But that’s been corrected now.’

He kept staring at me like he had more to say. Surely he’d figured out that I wasn’t Christy. Aside from being among the tallest girls in our year, we looked nothing alike. My hair had been much darker, for one thing. And my waistline had been much bigger for another.

But he really did seem to think I was Christy. Which wasn’t at all how I imagined my night would go when I’d first walked in.

I nearly didn’t turn up at all. Who willingly goes back into the bear pit once they’re freed? Someone who’s flippin’ out of her mind, that’s who.

My heart started rattling in my chest before I’d even set foot through the Richmond pub’s door. Upstairs, a table was set up beside the function room’s entrance. Two women waited to label the alumni but I didn’t recognize them and it was easy enough to sidestep their markers and Scotch Tape. I was well-practiced in the art of creeping about.

I should never have let Kate convince me to come. Of course all the feelings I’d packed away over the years wouldn’t stay neatly stowed. They’d wait till I was surrounded by my classmates to spring their locks.

To my relief, at least there was no break in conversation when I stepped in to the room. A few faces turned curiously but, recognizing neither friend nor foe, quickly turned away again. After twenty minutes I was still alone on the fringes of the party. I may as well have been sixteen again.

Actually, that’s not quite true, because I was rarely left alone then. Given the alternative, this was a bit better.

So Jack’s chattiness came as quite the surprise. He’d said about ten words to me during the whole of secondary school.

‘Do you see any of the old crowd yet?’ he asked, scanning the room.

My skin suddenly crawled with dread. What if Christy herself was somewhere in the room? Or her friends? They’d know in a second that I was an imposter. Then they’d single me out in front of the whole room and it’d be eleventh grade all over again.  ‘No, no, I don’t see anyone.’ I started edging toward the door.

‘Me neither. But I might not recognize some of them. People can change a lot in ten years.’ He glanced again at the crowd. ‘Isn’t it odd? When you’re in school you can’t wait to get away from everyone and when you’ve left you’re excited to see them again.’

Speak for yourself. ‘Surely you didn’t hate school though. What’s there to hate when everyone loves you and you’re the teacher’s pet?’

He laughed before catching himself. ‘You’re exaggerating. I was never the teacher’s pet.’

‘But everyone did love you, so there’s no use denying it.’

‘What about you? The school went into mourning when you moved to France. Seriously, they flew the flags at half-mast. Bereavement counsellors were called in.’

I could think of at least one girl who wasn’t in mourning when Christy moved away. ‘No black arm bands?’

‘They changed our uniforms. Head to toe widow’s weeds for the girls and black suits for the boys.’

‘Well that was a long time ago,’ I said. ‘They probably renamed a building or something and went back to the usual uniforms eventually.’

He touched his beer to mine. ‘Immortalized in concrete. That’s my dream. Hey, what do you say we get out of here? No one else is here that we know anyway.’

‘Definitely! Let’s go.’ Before Christy sodding Blake turned up.

I’d tell him later about the confusion.

CHAPTER TWO

To my relief, we left Richmond completely. The last thing I needed was for poor Jack to see Christy sodding Blake and think he was having a doppelganger moment on the sidewalk. Though I still couldn’t believe we actually looked alike.

The Christy I knew had cold blue eyes. Cold-as-a-shark, dead-soul blue eyes. This detail was burned into my memory because she never looked away when she tormented me. That girl had not one ounce of shame in her.

My eyes were green. Dad said they were beautiful, like cat’s eyes, but he had a parental duty of kindness.

People can change a lot in ten years and small details get forgotten or misremembered. So Jack didn’t seem to notice the color change as we chatted all the way into Soho. I was surprised when he pointed to his office on Soho Square. I’d always pegged him as the City type.

‘You really work for Fox?’ I said as we found a tiny corner table in the crowded pub nearby. ‘Oiling the great wheels of Hollywood? Do you get to walk down the red carpet and get papped falling out of nightclubs with your knickers showing?’

He looked uncomfortable as he sipped his winter ale. ‘I’m not an actor, or Paris Hilton, despite the tiny dog I like to carry around in my gym bag.’ He saw my face. ‘Joking,’ he said as I laughed. ‘I don’t go to the gym.’

‘You don’t really have a-’

‘Dog? No. And I’m just a lowly marketer. I’m the cog inside the cog inside the cog inside the great wheels of Hollywood.’

‘Do you like it?’

‘I love it! What’s not to love about getting to see new releases before everyone else?’

‘Are you the one who hires the cheesy voiceover man? One man, one banana, one unholy love story,’ I intoned in my best radio announcer voice.

‘I wish I was, but they’re cheesed up before I get my hands on them. We’re the ones who create the marketing for Europe. It’s not glamorous but I work with a lot of nice people. What about you? Did you stay in France after school?’

Uh oh. There was really no way to answer his question without fibbing. A guilty pang made my stomach lurch. Was this where I had to tell Jack the truth, and watch that friendly, open smile fade as he realized we didn’t really have a history together? I knew what would happen then. The easy banter we’d shared all evening would dry up. It wouldn’t matter that it had nothing to do with who we’d been ten years before. Then he’d quickly finish his ale and make some excuse to leave.

I didn’t want that to happen. Not when we were having so much fun.

I could, however, tell him the truth about me. At least then it was just one omission rather than a series of lies that he’d hate me for.

‘I went to university here. In Leeds. I’ve been in England all along. How about you?’

He hesitated. Maybe when he said “school”, he meant university. Christy probably kept in touch after she moved, wrote him long letters that were definitely not postmarked Leeds. I steeled myself for his next response.

‘I took a year out and then went to Edinburgh,’ he said. ‘What a great city. Have you been?’

Relief flooded through me. Then I remembered that it was only a momentary stay of execution. ‘I’ve been up for the Fringe a few times,’ I said. ‘It is a great city. Did you travel the world on your year off, just you and your backpack and your little dog?’

‘Something like that, minus the dog and the backpack. What are you doing now?’

I told him about my dietetics practice. Like Jack, I loved my work. Unlike him, my job was about as far from glamorous as you could get without cleaning motorway lavatories for a living. ‘I’m really glad we ran into each other,’ I said as we sipped our drinks. My tension was easing away with distance from our old classmates. I was having a tremendous time, the kind of time I’d dreamed of all through school. There was no harm in carrying on the charade for a bit longer, just until I found a natural way to introduce the fact that I was another person altogether. No big deal.

‘I nearly didn’t go to the reunion,’ I said. ‘I didn’t-’

‘How could you even think about not going? You were the most popular girl in school!’

I clamped my mouth shut on my next words. I was about to tell him about not wanting to see the girls who’d bullied me. Girls like Christy. Must remember you are Christy. Obviously I’d make an excellent secret agent. Lips as secure as Fort Knox, that’s me.

‘It’s fate,’ he continued. ‘I mean really, what are the chances?’ He was staring into my eyes with a look that I’d begun to recognize in the past few years, since losing seventy pounds and gaining a social life. It wasn’t fate on Jack’s mind.

‘Well, it was a gathering of former classmates,’ I said, not daring to believe what I was seeing. ‘It would have been more fateful if we’d run into each other randomly in London.’

I hadn’t just had a crush on Jack in school. I truly thought I could love him one day, if only he knew I was alive. But I was about three miles below his radar, which was ironic since in those days I was probably visible from space. So I gathered bits of him wherever I could. His every utterance, and the cloying, spicy scent of his AXE Fusion, were committed to memory. I went to all his home football matches, even when it rained, even when I was almost the only one standing there, sodden at the edge of the hated playing field.

‘Well, fate or not, this is fantastic,’ he said.

He was doing it again. Looking at me like I was the last handful of Doritos in the bag. I nodded, not trusting my voice.

‘Could I see you again, do you think?’

Again I nodded. I wondered how he felt about muteness in a date. Wait a minute. Was he asking me on a date?! ‘I’d love that.’

Gently he leaned forward and put his warm lips to mine. It was a deal with the Devil, sealed with a kiss. By the time we traded cell numbers and said good night, I was floating about six inches above the London sidewalk.

*****

**From February 11th to February, get “Weightless” for FREE on Smashwords, using the coupon code: ZH34Q (not case-sensetive)**

**Buy “Weightless”: Amazon – US   Amazon – UK   Barnes & Noble

MicheleGormanPic**About author, Michele Gorman:

Michele Gorman is the #1 best-selling author of Bella Summer Takes a Chance and the Single in the City series. She also writes upmarket commercial fiction under the pen name Jamie Scott. Born and raised in the US, Michele has lived in London for 16 years.

Michele is represented by the Hardman & Swainson Literary Agency (www.hardmanswainson.com).

Michele can sign eBooks for yourself or as gifts through http://www.authorgraph.com/authors/expatdiaries. The personal inscription goes straight to the email or kindle of your choice.

**Contact Michele: Website   Blog   Facebook   Twitter

**For enquiries please contact michelegormanPR@nottinghillpress.co.uk**

Filed Under: Book Review, Weightless Tagged With: Book review, Books, Chick-Lit, Michele Gorman, Reunions, Weightless, Women's Fiction

THE BRITISH INVASION

June 6, 2013

THE BRITISH INVASION

Fans of British chick lit & romantic comedy: Win a haul of books just in time for your summer holidays from some of the UK’s best-loved and best-selling authors! 

5 winners + 25 books = a Summer of Love

To celebrate the launch of Notting Hill Press, five lucky winners will each choose five personally inscribed and signed eBooks from the Notting Hill Press authors – there are 50 best-selling and award-winning books to choose from. To enter, go to Amazon (the giveaway is open to US or UK residents)* and:

  • Kick off your summer reading by buying any TWO eBooks listed below between now and June 13th.
  • Click the “Share This Item” button on the Amazon Thank You page after purchase to tweet/Facebook about each book (if you use Facebook and/or twitter).
  • Enter to win by posting a comment over on the Notting Hill Press Facebook page telling us which two eBooks you bought. If you don’t use Facebook, you can enter the competition by adding your comment here instead. Winners will be chosen randomly from all the comments on June 14th and posted in both places.
  • “Like” the Notting Hill Press Facebook page to get freebies, discounts and sneak peeks at the authors’ books before they’re published! And if you’re on twitter, follow @nottinghillPR

Best of luck from all the Notting Hill Press authors, and don’t forget to check back on the Notting Hill Press Facebook page or the blog on June 14th to see if you’ve won!

Much love and happy reading,

Talli Roland, Belinda Jones, Michele Gorman, Matt Dunn, Nicola May, Scarlett Bailey, Nick Spalding, Sue Welfare, Chrissie Manby, Victoria Connelly and Lucy Robinson xoxo

*This is an Amazon eBook giveaway, open to US and UK entries. It will run from June 3rd through June 13th. The five winners will be randomly selected and announced on June 14th on the Facebook page and Notting Hill Press blog. Winners can choose any 5 books from the participating authors – here’s the list.

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Filed Under: Isabella Tagged With: Belinda Jones, Books, Chick-Lit, Chrissie Manby, Lucy Robinson, Matt Dunn, Michele Gorman, Nick Spalding, Nicola May, Notting Hill Press, Scarlett Bailey, Sue Welfare, Talli Roland, The British Invasion, Victoria Connelly

Michele Gorman

February 12, 2013 2 Comments

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About the author, Michele Gorman:  Michele Gorman is the best-selling author of Single in the City, Misfortune Cookie and The Twelve Days to Christmas. She also writes upmarket commercial fiction (historical, young adult) under the pen name Jamie Scott.

Born and raised in the US, Michele has lived in London for 15 years.

INTERVIEW

Describe yourself in five words:  Happy, clumsy, determined, curious, forgetful

Salty or sweet?  Sweet (though salted caramel is an inspired combination)

Why do you write in the Chick Lit genre?  It started with a dare. I read my first chick lit book, a New York Times Bestseller, and absolutely hated it – terrible story, terrible writing. My old agent had just rejected the book I’d spent a year finishing (I wrote literary fiction at that time) and I was on a rant. My then-boyfriend challenged me to write chick lit if I thought I could do better. So I outlined what became Single in the City, my debut with Penguin. I realized that I loved writing in the genre and have never looked back (though I do still also write upmarket commercial fiction under the pen name Jamie Scott).

Hard/paperbacks or eBooks?  A year ago I would have said paperbacks all the way! But I bought a kindle so that I could see the layout of my books before publishing them, and I’ve grown fond of it. I still prefer paperbacks but eReaders are very convenient, and appeal to my impulse buying habit 🙂

Who or what inspires you?  Nearly everything inspires me. I see small wonders every day, and they all get filed away in my imagination. For example, the other day I got off the Tube at St Pauls, and just ahead of me was a man carrying a fruit picker (one of those long poles with the little basket on the end). In Central London! I’m still imagining a peach orchard tucked away behind the City’s buildings. It may become a short story one day.

Take us through what a day/night is like for you?  I’m an early riser (something my boyfriend has had to adapt to – when we met, he liked to sleep in. Now, he says, he sleeps like a farmer). I get up and check emails, etc with a sweet cup of coffee till 8.30 or so. Then I’ll either go for a jog (we live at the edge of one of the Royal parks) or get straight into writing. I write till lunchtime and then usually do marketing/admin in the afternoon. This involves answering interviews, talking to bloggers, reviewers and other writers, brainstorming cover designs, preparing for paperback printing, organizing future marketing campaigns, paying my bills, cleaning my flat, calling my parents, family, friends, etc. I generally publish 2 or 3 books a year, so my days are always split between writing in the mornings and everything else in the afternoons.

You have a pseudonym.  How is writing under the name Jamie Scott different?  Jamie Scott writes upmarket commercial fiction. As I mentioned, I began as a literary fiction writer, so it’s my original writing style. That style tends to be a bit more gentle and atmospheric than my chick lit style, which is fast and funny.

For example, the most recent Jamie Scott book, Little Sacrifices is about a Northern family who moves to Savannah, Georgia in the late 1940s, hoping against hope that they’ll be welcomed. But they’re Yankees and worse, they’re civil rights advocates almost a decade too early. The story is narrated by the daughter, May, as she looks back on her life. So it’s an easygoing voice, evoking storytelling by a wise old woman while rocking on a wide veranda with a sweating glass of lemonade.

What is your favorite word?  Tickle, though I am partial to all onomatopoeic words.

If you could meet other author, who would it be and why?  John Irving, because I think he writes some of the best fiction out there. Plus, his stories are always a bit weird and I’d like to know if the man is weird too.

What has been your greatest achievement this far in your career?  Gosh, I don’t know if I can choose one thing, because everything that happens is the result of the events that came before. The biggest thrill I had was when my agent called to tell me that Penguin had bid on my debut. I was at work and literally squealed in our large, open-plan office.

What is the best advice you’ve been given?  That there’s no harm in trying. My parents never said “You can’t”. They always said “Why can’t you?”

Can you tell us about any of your upcoming projects?  Sure! Bella Summer Takes a Chance publishes on 12th February and I’m very excited (and nervous) about that. It’s about 5 women all taking chances in their lives, and it’s my first book after the Single in the City series (hence the nerves). I can’t wait to find out if readers like it!

I’ve also just started writing The Reinvention of Lucy Winters, which is my most ambitious book to date. It’s a Cinderella story about Lucy who, through hypnosis, awakens a new woman, no longer a pushover. Unfortunately she’s stuck in her old life, and it’s one that no longer fits. Her newfound spirit puts her on a collision course with everyone she knows, challenging the very identity that she’s so carefully built. It’s set in the world of investment banking (which was my background before writing), so it will be extra-challenging to put readers comfortably in that complex and terrible world.

Thanks so much Isabella, for having me on your blog!

Bella Summer Takes a Chance 8.1**Contact Michele!

Michele Gorman

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**Be sure to check back on the 18th to read my interview of “Bella Summer  Takes a Chance!”

Filed Under: Michele Gorman Tagged With: Chick-Lit, Interview, Michele Gorman

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