Louise Wise (also writes as T E Kessler): Zanna Mackenzie
Showing posts with label Zanna Mackenzie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Zanna Mackenzie. Show all posts

Thursday, 5 September 2013

Holidays from Hell

by

Zanna Mackenzie


So, it’s September and the end of the peak holiday season, the schools are back and summer seems but a distant memory. We all look forward to those weekend escapes and week-long holidays but do they live up to the great expectations? Sometimes yes – but, it seems, most of the time, no they don’t.  Am I the only one who finds there is an inexplicable and confusing difference between how a hotel/holiday cottage looks in the photos on the internet or in the brochures compared with the view you get when you’re actually standing in the property?

Booked via a reputable cottage agency a property we stayed in during a break in Norfolk looked fantastic on the internet, the reality was unfortunately quite different. The lounge sported an ultra-creepy ancient lace and white silk christening robe pinned to the wall which gave the whole place a very unsettling ghostly atmosphere – we avoided the lounge and sat at the dining table in the kitchen all the time instead!

In Keswick in the Lake District our property had an added extra which wasn’t welcome – a mouse which liked to come out for a night time stroll. The whole place had laminate floors so you could hear it scuttling around everywhere – we didn’t get much sleep and left after a few days. Then there was the barn conversion near Ambleside which sported a dilapidated caravan right outside the kitchen window – needless to say that didn’t feature in the internet photos!

A log cabin in Scotland’s Argyll had a strange and rather unpleasant smell which refused to dissipate even with all the windows open and a bracing Scottish gale whistling through the rooms. It also had a bathroom which you felt grubbier, not cleaner after visiting – I still shudder at the memory of that one.

In North Wales there was a property with the added convenience of the railway line ten foot from the lounge window, all the crockery in the kitchen rattled alarmingly from the vibrations of the high speed trains en route to Holyhead.

Holiday disasters don’t seem to be restricted to the UK either. In Greece there was the studio apartment with a bathroom not much more than a hole in the floor, ripped sheets on the bed and a grapevine so overgrown you had to fight your way through to the front door like a fairy tale prince trying to machete his way through the forest to rescue his princess. In Romania – when it was still under the old Communist rule – our flight was diverted from Bucharest due to fog and our plane instead landed in Timisoara and was immediately surrounded by armed guards. We were herded onto a bus like criminals and put up in a dingy tower block of a hotel with mould all over the walls, damp bedding – with 10 people to a room!

On reflection there have been some vacation successes scattered in amongst the never-again- hols, so in the interests of presenting a balanced view of vacations here are some of my holiday highlights:

*Ten days touring British Columbia in western Canada, breath taking scenery, excellent standards of service, friendly people and the most gorgeous and romantic B&B on Vancouver Island which only had one room – a whole suite with its own sundeck right on the water’s edge.

*An ultra-tasteful little cottage in Snowdonia that looked even better than the internet pics (!!)  had stunning views of the mountains and a little study/writing room with views of said mountains.

*A cottage next to a private beach in south west Scotland – step out of the door and there was the sea – spectacular and blissfully peaceful too.

To prove to us that you don’t need to endure traffic jams on the M6 or flight delays at the noisy airport one of our best holidays was barely four miles from our own home! We house (and pet) sat for some friends who own a barn conversion set in 2 acres of grounds – the sun shone, we sat out in the gorgeous gardens all day loving having all that space around us, read, ate, chatted, walked the dogs and totally and utterly relaxed. There was no urge for frantic sightseeing, no unfamiliar surroundings in which you struggle to settle or sleep, no long journeys or having to pack everything but the kitchen sink ‘just in case’.  Holidays can come in all styles, lengths and budgets, and sometimes they even manage to be relaxing…



The Love Programme

Amazon.com
Amazon.UK
Thanks to an embarrassing incident involving a wedding and her ex-boyfriend Marcus, Lucy has to leave her home town in a hurry and needs a place to escape to for a while.

Best friend Fiona is convinced now would be a good time for Lucy to get herself a new life with some potential for romance thrown in. Fate seems to agree when Lucy is given the once-in-a-lifetime chance to star in a TV show and be a contestant on The Love Programme - two weeks of luxury living on a grand Highland estate coupled with, she hopes, fun and romance in wildest Scotland.

When Lucy meets Paul - the young, handsome owner of the Highland estate - she thinks she may have found the love of her life but who is the mysterious Hannah and what part does she play in his life? When she discovers that Marcus is planning to follow her to Scotland to win her back Lucy has some serious soul searching to do. Does she have a future with Paul, with Marcus or is she yet to find the man of her dreams?

About the author Zanna Mackenzie: Mackenzie lives in the UK with her husband, 4 dogs, a vegetable patch that’s home to far too many weeds and an ever expanding library of books waiting to be read.

Being a freelance writer and editor of business publications is her ‘day job’ but, at every opportunity, she can be found scribbling down notes on scenes for whatever novel she’s working on. She loves it when the characters in her novels take on minds of their own and start deviating from the original plot!
Formerly a travel agent and therapist (she has qualifications in clinical aromatherapy, crystal healing, naturopathic nutrition and herbalism) she loves walking the dogs and gardening – that’s when she’s not writing or reading!

Zanna has written two novels, The Love Programme (Astraea Press) and How Do You Spell Love? (Crooked Cat Publishing) and both were published in early 2013.

Read an extract of The Love Programme below:

Wednesday, 5 June 2013

Confessions of a writer... anxiety attacks.

by 
Zanna Mackenzie

When I was asked to contribute to WWBB's theme on Confessions of A Writer lots of ideas whizzed through my mind  and I spent a while debating what I wanted to confess about.

The fact that when I’m writing, everything else (well, almost everything) gets neglected, especially the housework, was one confession possibility - and very true!

As was the fact that I have burnt many a meal by not paying attention to what I’m doing because my thoughts are caught up in character dialogue and plot points for my latest work in progress.

What I have decided to confess though is that, I think, writing helps to keep me sane.  All my life I’ve been prone to nerves, worry and anxiety which has affected  me in my social life as well as in my career. I have tried hypnosis, meditation, aromatherapy, mineral supplements (magnesium and calcium are supposed to aid and calm the nervous system I had read) as well as self help books, all with varying degrees of success.

Amazon.UK
Amazon.com
Years ago I used to write and enjoyed it, then, disillusioned with feedback on some of my work, I gave it up. Last year, encouraged by my husband, I began to write fiction again, re-editing two of my books and daring to send them off (for the first time) to a publisher for consideration. Within a few months both books had been accepted and I was on my way to becoming a published author. So I began to take my writing seriously, fitting it in around my day job, allocating time to work on my next books.  My creativity flowed and I found I had loads of ideas, characters evolving, plots all fighting to be written down, snippets of dialogue to make notes on, and books to plan. As my creative mind came to life, in direct contrast, my state of anxiety diminished. It seems as though, for me, being creative and putting my mind to work on all these books, plots, characters etc meant my mind no longer had time to dwell on creating anxiety and worries.

Creativity has long been recognised as a way to help with stress, anxiety and mental health issues and, for me, my confession is that writing truly does help to keep me sane. For anyone out there with anxiety issues I would say try getting creative!

For help and support with anxiety issues the following website is a great resource: http://www.anxietyuk.org.uk/