With 200 rejections for her first novel, Sibel
could have easily given up. She persevered and is now an award-winning, international
best-selling author with 16 titles under her belt.
1. Tell us about your background?
My
mum is English and my dad Turkish Cypriot. Dad’s originally from Girne. He left
in 1958 to study in Britain ,
which is where I was born. I grew up very Anglicised. There were no Cypriots near
us in Hertfordshire and there were hardly any ethnic minorities in my junior
school, which did lead to a bit of bullying. I went on to work in the Crown & Country Court for five years, then spent
10 years working for Hertfordshire Constabulary. Now I’m lucky to be able to
write full time.
2. How did you get into writing?
I
discovered the wonderful world of books as a child and remember scribbling down
stories whenever I had a spare moment. I’d lose myself in books for hours. It
was drastic things like splitting up with a boyfriend that made me start my
first novel when I was about seventeen. I never got further than the first
three chapters, though, because I didn’t have a clue what I was doing, other
than using a typewriter (remember those?)! Then I started another one when I
was about twenty-three, and ditto. I just knew that I loved writing and one day
I would actually write a novel. Seven years ago my dream became a reality and I
was able to start working on my first book.
3. Was it easy to get your first novel, Fourteen Days Later, published?
I’m
sure we’ve all been stuck in a rut in our lives: Fourteen Days Later proves that anything is possible if you just
take a chance on life. It’s a fun romantic comedy with a unique infusion of
British and Turkish Cypriot characters. Think Bridget Jones meets My Big
Fat Greek Wedding. After I wrote it, I contacted hundreds of agents and
publishers and got a whopping 200 rejections!
When
I first looked into publishing independently, platforms like Amazon Kindle
didn’t support international authors. I decided to write another book (a chick
lit mystery called Fashion, Lies, and
Murder), hone my writing skills and wait for an opportunity to come up. Then
in 2010, when Amazon opened up their doors to non-US authors, I uploaded Fourteen Days Later and Fashion, Lies, and Murder onto their Kindle
store and haven’t looked back since!
4. How many units are you shifting, which are
your best sellers?
Last
year I sold over 70,000 books. My biggest selling novels are Fourteen Days Later and Fashion, Lies, and Murder.
5. We hear you are now signed up to a big US
publisher?
Yes, last year, USA Today Bestselling author
Gemma Halliday contacted me because she was setting up a boutique publishing
company and wanted to republish my fun mystery series under her imprint. I knew
Gemma because we both contributed to a blog for writers. It’s been a fun and
exciting ride so far!
6) You’re best known as
a 'ChickLit' author, but you've also written children's books and non-fiction. Is
it easy to flip from one genre to another?
I
don’t find it easy; I find it a challenge, which is good. If we do the same
thing all the time we can get bored and stale. Plus, my writing journey has
taken me on a spiritual journey, and I’ve changed a lot in the last five years
since I wrote my first novel. I like to raise issues that I think are
important, and as a writer I’m lucky that I can lend a voice to them. Lately
they’ve involved subjects which are raw, edgy, and very real in the society we
live in, such as sexual assault, poaching of endangered species and the illegal
animal wildlife trade.
7. What inspired you to write Trafficked: The Diary of a Sex Slave?
About
seven years ago I watched a mini series about girls from Eastern
Europe who’d been trafficked. It haunted me for a long time. Years
later, I was sitting in a doctor’s surgery and picked up a magazine, which
featured one of the women who’d been trafficked. A chill run through me: in all
those years, I’d never heard anything in the media about it. I started
researching other victims’ stories. They were horrific, heartbreaking, gut
wrenching. Despite being a global problem, this was a subject many people were
unaware of. I really wanted to do something to raise awareness. Although the
book is fictional, it’s all inspired by real stories. The truly scary thing is this
is going on right under our noses.
8. How did you end up writing a
gluten-free Turkish recipe book?
My
husband is Coeliac and when I first met him, there was very little choice:
eating gluten-free bread was like eating a brick! But you shouldn’t have to sacrifice
taste. So I decided to combine my knowledge of tasty, easy-to-cook, and
nutritious Turkish food with gluten-free recipes. There are over 80 recipes of
traditional Turkish favourites like Musakka, Oven Cooked Kebab, and Calamari,
along with dishes that have a Turkish Cypriot twist to them, such as Cypriot
Olive Bread and Hellim Pasta. Plus my own creations of Red Lentil and Rocket
Soup, Caramelized Roast Vegetables with Feta, Spiced Mushroom Rice,
Turkish-Style Shepherd's Pie, and Choca Mocha Walnut Cake.
9. What Turkish thing could you not live without?
I’m a hellim addict so I can’t do without it!
10. Where do you hang out in the TRNC?
My fave TRNC hangout is Roots Bar in Küçük Erenköy. It’s a lively,
friendly bar with a great atmosphere and a good mix of locals and ex-pats.
Sibel Hodge’s latest novel Butterfly, about two broken people and their struggle to find inner strength, trust, and hope, is available as a download from all good e-bookshops.
A super interview with a super author!
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting it.
Thanks so much, Barbara, that's so sweet of you to say! <3 :) xx
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