
MY INTERVIEW WITH SUE COOK
My guest tonight is one of television and radio’s
best loved broadcasters.
As well as being an Ambassador for the Prince’s Trust, she is a patron of the Rainbow Trust, the Children’s Liver Disease Foundation and the British Wireless Fund for the Blind.
My guest loves every
project she’s involved in and enters into everything with total and obvious enthusiasm,
though she says that nothing beats the buzz of being on television.
Sue,
firstly many thanks for agreeing to be interviewed. We’ve exchanged the
occasional comment on Facebook and I know you’ve read some of my previous interviews,
but tonight I want to talk about the Sue Cook few of us may know. Nervous?
Of course I am! Seriously, I’d much rather be asking
the questions than answering them!
Sue,
can you tell me how you got into writing and what your first work was about
(published, or not!)?
Your
career covers virtually all aspects of the media from radio to television and
from books to film. Is there any one that you find more fulfilling than the
others?
They all have different pros and cons but if I
really had to choose, it would be radio. Live radio, not recorded. I love live
broadcasting. And I love interviewing people about their lives... finding out
about their joys and woes and how they handle them. I love putting them at
their ease, getting them to trust me so that we can have a natural conversation
as if there weren’t several million people listening. I must admit I miss the
buzz and adrenaline of that now.
Cinema
seems to be a major part of your working life now. Tracker with Ray Winstone was your first project. How did that come
about?
Your
husband Ian directed Tracker. How
easy was that and do you intend collaborating on further projects?
It was huge fun collaborating. Especially in a
landscape as gorgeous as New Zealand.
One of the nicest aspects of broadcasting is the
fact that everyone works as a team, and it’s the same in the movie business. Ian
and I work really well together. He’s terrific at visualising the overall
picture, and tells me the way he sees each particular scene playing out, and
then I’ll go away and write it. I bring it back to show him and we modify it a
bit more. We do this scene by scene, moving on to the next one when we think
we’ve got it right. We are working together now on two projects – one for TV
and another for the big screen.
You’re
currently adapting one of your books On
Dangerous Ground for the cinema. How involved will you be and will you
adapt your other book Force of Nature?
I might adapt Force
of Nature when I get the chance. I think it could work well as a TV mini
series.
I’ve
just listened to your interview with the wonderful author Katie Fforde and I
know from what you both said that you’re very keen to help aspiring writers. Is
that what inspired The Write Lines
radio series, Sue?
What
advice you could give a new writer?
Hmm.... that changes every week. I think the best
advice is to tell a good story. Don’t get too hung up on the editing and
sentence construction. Leave that for the second draft. Once you’re happy with
the story – its beginning, middle and
end – and written it out, then you can start the polishing process. Oh – and I
always write a biography of each of my characters – where they went to school, what their parents
were like, what always got them into trouble, what heartbreaks they’ve had in
their lives, what their ambitions are, where they buy their clothes... some of
these things might never come out in the book you write, but they will inform
the way your characters behave and speak. Works wonders for writing the
dialogue.
Your
autobiography would be absolutely fascinating. When will you be writing it, Sue?
It’s hard to think of one’s own life as fascinating!
I think I will have a go at writing it one day though, before Alzheimers sets
in!! But I’m not sure whether I’ll ever want it published. The trouble with
writing one’s own story is that it involves so many other people. Sometimes
there are certain aspects of their lives they’d rather not have publicised. A
dilemma there. I’ll have to write it and see how it comes out.
Do
you have a set routine as a writer and a special place where you work?
I try to be at my desk most mornings, other
commitments permitting, by 9.30 having had an energising swim in our indoor
pool and then tea and toast for breakfast – or Ian makes us porridge in the
winter. I’ve got a writing den in my garden so that I can tell myself I’m off
to work. If I stayed in the house with the phone and the radio and my husband
to chat to, not to mention endless excuses to procrastinate, I’d never get
anything written. I set myself a target of a thousand words a day. I don’t
always manage that, but it’s something to aim for.
What
project are you’re working on right now?
What
is the most important piece of advice you could give a budding writer?
As I said above really. And get yourself on Twitter
and get to know other writers. They are all so supportive. Writing can be a
lonely business. It’s nice to have some writing buddies.
One
last question, Sue. If you could achieve one important goal within the next 5
years, what would it be?
Finish this third novel! And if I really dare
hope... to have finished the fourth one too!
Sue,
it’s been a pleasure talking to you. My thanks for taking the time out of your
busy schedule to be with us on my blog.
It’s a pleasure! Thank
you Richard for talking to me.
Sue has an excellent web site at: http://suecook.com/
and her wonderful radio spot to help would-be writers is at http://thewritelines.co.uk.
Sue’s book On
Dangerous Ground is available on Amazon at http://www.amazon.co.uk/On-Dangerous-Ground-Sue-Cook/dp/0755322339/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpi_7
and Force of
Nature is also on Amazon at http://www.amazon.co.uk/Force-Nature-Sue-Cook/dp/0755322363/ref=sr_1_8?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1358981107&sr=1-8
And don't be shy. My Temporal Detective Agency books are available on http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=richard+hardie&rh=n%3A341677031%2Ck%3Arichard+hardie
Blog on, Dudes!
And don't be shy. My Temporal Detective Agency books are available on http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Ddigital-text&field-keywords=richard+hardie&rh=n%3A341677031%2Ck%3Arichard+hardie
Blog on, Dudes!
A great interview with a great lady, Richard! A very enjoyable and informative interview. Well done - and thank you!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks, Marit. I agree with you, Sue is an extraordinary person and a pleasure to chat with.
DeleteA great interview with a great lady, Richard! A very enjoyable and informative interview. Well done - and thank you!
ReplyDeleteWhat an interesting interview. I love the sound of having to go to New Zealand for research!
ReplyDeleteHi Rebecca. I'm thinking of setting my next book in Peru, China, Egypt and Greece. New Zealand would be the book after that I think!
DeleteAnother interesting interview, Richard. Thanks for sharing, Sue. A writing den in the garden sound just the thing!
ReplyDeleteHi Glynis. Many thanks, Glynis. Everything about Due was interesting!
DeleteWell, where could you go after Hedges & Hardie? A lovely interview.
ReplyDeleteAh, there you have it, Carol! Many thanks. A great complement from the mistress of blog interviews!
DeleteI really love your website.. Pleasant colors & theme.
ReplyDeleteDid you make this amazing site yourself? Please reply back as I'm attempting to create my very own site and would love to learn where you got this from or what the theme is named. Kudos!
Feel free to visit my blog cost of movers Orlando
Hi Anon,
DeleteI gave some ideas to a friend of mine and she created the site for me using WIX. I don't know whether it's a template or not, but I agree she did a wonderful job. Unfortunately she no longer designs websites, so I can't pass on her details. My blog is one of the standards from Blogger. Did you join my blog? You'd be very welcome. Many thanks!
You ought to take part in a contest for one of the best blogs online.
ReplyDeleteI will recommend this blog!
Also visit my homepage: Krantzkloof Nature Reserve Kwazulu Natal
Many thanks, Anon. Much appreciated, Keep logging into my blog as there's lots more fascinating interviews coming up!
ReplyDeleteRichard
It is so inspiring and heart-warming to find a celebrity who helps other people to be discovered too. What a lovely lady.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great interview, Richard! Sue sounds a lovely person - so natural, down-to-earth and encouraging. I will definitely check out those links.
ReplyDeleteGreetings! I've been reading your site for some time
ReplyDeletenow and finally got the courage to go ahead and give you a shout out from Houston Texas!
Just wanted to tell you keep up the excellent job!