Comfort Reads – Guest Paula Williams

The Oxford English Dictionary defines the word ‘comfort’ as a state of physical well-being; in pluralthings that make life easy or pleasant. To me that term is synonymous with reading, and I think today’s special guest, cosy crime writer Paula Williams would heartily agree!

Thank you,
Rosie, for inviting me to talk about my comfort reads.  It was incredibly difficult to pick just five
to talk about because, to me, reading is the ultimate comfort activity.  Curled up, reading on a cold, rainy day when
the wind is howling outside and I’m snug and warm – that’s my idea of bliss!

So, as I can’t
include the entire contents of my bookcases/Kindle I’ve checked them out and
found the following precious (to me) 
books.

1. The Discontented Pony.   Noel Barr

This tops the
list because this book was the reason I was such an early reader.  It belonged to my older sister and I loved it
so much and used to beg people to read it to me.  But my mum didn’t have time (I have 5
siblings!) and my sister didn’t have the inclination.  So I learnt to read.  I don’t remember how, I only know I would
spend hours bent over this book, trying to make sense of the words. The copy in
the picture is not my sister’s. That disappeared years ago. (She doesn’t share
my need to hoard books)  I found it in a
charity shop many years ago and leapt on it with cries of joy. It has pride of
place on my Treasured Books shelf ever since.

2. When We Were Very Young.  By A A Milne. 

Having just
said that nobody in my family would read to me, my maternal grandmother used to
read this to me when she was visiting or we went to stay with her.  I loved it and knew many of the poems off by
heart. (Still do, in fact!)

It is the
reason my eldest son is called Christopher. 
There was never any doubt in my mind what my first son was going to be
called, even before I became pregnant! 
And, I’m happy to say, that he loves the book as much as I do – although
I can’t help wondering if part of the appeal came from the fact that if I started
reading the poems as a bedtime story, I would find it very hard to stop at just
one. It was a brilliant way of extending bedtime.

Years later, I
read the poems to my grandchildren, although they didn’t like them quite so
much, with the possible exception of The King’s Breakfast, which I do with all
the different voices.  How come I forget
where I put the car keys yet remember in perfect detail every single line of
that silly poem?

3. The Footsteps of Angels.  H.W. Longfellow

Hope it’s all
right to include a single poem as my comfort read.  Now this really was a comfort read – at least
it was when I was nine years old. 

 I’ve already mentioned my maternal grandmother
and how she died when I was young.  I was
devastated by her death as she was a gentle, bookish lady and we really enjoyed
each other’s company.  She lived with us
for the last year of her life and I missed her so much when she died.  Our household was a noisy, very boy dominated
one, (I have four brothers and my sister was away at school for a lot of the
time) and I treasured the precious quiet time my grandmother and I spent
together.

After she
died, I inherited many of her books, one of which was a book of poems by H.W. Longfellow
which she’d been awarded back in 1907/08 for ‘Regularity, Progress and
Conduct.”  It amuses me to see that
Longfellow is described in the Preface as one of the ‘modern’ poets!

This book,
like the other two, lives on the shelf allocated very precious books.  The pages are all brown and crumbling and the
whole thing is falling apart but I still treasure it.

I learnt The
Footsteps of Angels just after her death. 
All ten verses of it!  I had the
idea that I was learning it for her. 
Reading it through now, I can see it’s very sentimental but at the time,
it was a real comfort to grieving little nine year old me and brought me a
little closer to my sorely missed ‘Nan’.

4. The Big Four.  Agatha Christie.

My mother
introduced me to Agatha Christie, Ngaio Marsh and Dorothy Sayers when I was about
12 and I have loved crime fiction ever since, both as a reader and a writer.

I hadn’t read
any Agatha Christie for years although I really enjoyed most of the television
productions, especially the ones with David Suchet as Poirot and Joan Hickson
as Miss Marple.  But a couple of years
ago, we were staying near Dartmouth in Devon and were waiting to take the steam
train up the Dart Valley.  Of course,
being as we were in the heart of ‘Agatha Christie’ country, there was a whole
selection of her books on sale in the station shop.  I chose The Big Four as I didn’t remember the
story – and I was totally drawn in.  I’d
completely forgotten what a great story teller she was and couldn’t put it down.

That
particular book brings back many memories, of my mother and, more recently, of
a lovely holiday in a beautiful part of the world.

5. On Writing.  Stephen King.

I bought this
book ages ago and resisted reading it for year, mostly because I’ve never read
any of Stephen King’s fiction (nor seen any of the films), as I don’t enjoy
horror stories.

But I’m so
glad I put my prejudice aside. Because here is a man in love with writing and
every time I get a bit down and think I’m not cut out to be a writer and that
maybe I should give it up and take up crochet or something, I dip in to this
and my world is restored.

And isn’t that
the point of a comfort read?

Author Bio

Paula Williams
is living her dream. She’s written all her life – her earliest efforts involved
blackmailing her unfortunate younger brothers into appearing in her plays and
pageants. But it’s only in recent years that she discovered to her surprise
that people with better judgement than her brothers actually liked what she
wrote and were prepared to pay her for it.

Now, she
writes every day in a lovely, book-lined study in her home in Somerset, where
she lives with her husband and a handsome but not always obedient rescue
Dalmatian called Duke.

She began her
writing career writing fiction for women’s magazines (and still does) but has
recently branched out into longer fiction. She also writes a monthly column,
Ideas Store, for the writers’ magazine, Writers’ Forum.

But, as with
the best of dreams, she worries that one day she’s going to wake up and find
she still has to bully her brothers into reading ‘the play what she wrote’.

Her debut
crime novel, Murder Served Cold, is
a murder mystery set in a small Somerset village which bears a striking
resemblance to the one she lives in. (Although, as far as she knows, none of
her neighbours are cold-blooded murderers!) 
It was published by Crooked Cat Books in October 2018, and is the first
in the Much Winchmoor Mysteries series, the second of which, Rough and Deadly,
will be published soon!

Murder Served
Cold can be bought at:  https://mybook.to/murderservedcold

Social Media
Links

Blog. at paulawilliamswriter.wordpress.com

Her facebook
author page is https://www.facebook.com/paula.williams.author.

Twitter.  @paulawilliams44.

Website  paulawilliamswriter.co.uk

Many thanks to Paula for taking part.

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