New look for Surprise Me

The U.S. and Canadian paperback cover for SURPRISE ME is here! I adore the yellow cover, which makes me think of summer and reading in the sun. It’s perfect for the beach of course, as well as your book club. In fact why not have your book club meet on the beach!? It will be on sale June 26th, but you can preorder it now using the links below! Sophie x

So what’s Surprise Me about? Well, Dan and Sylvie are a couple who decide to try and add some surprises into their marriage, to keep things interesting. Instead, they find themselves with life-changing shocks… It’s impossible to sum up a book in a few words – but in no particular order, this one is about: marriage, love, sex, Fitbits, surprises, shocks, racy underwear, Battersea Park, parents, death, life, old friends, new friends, misunderstandings, fear and bravery. It made me laugh and then it made me cry and I hope it does the same for you. I can’t wait for you to read it, if you haven’t already!

 

U.S.
Amazon
Barnes and Noble
BAM
IndieBound
Canada
Indigo
Amazon

Surprise Me around the world

To find out when Surprise Me will publish in your country please use the grid on this page. Some of the dates aren’t definite so please check with your local publisher or retailers!

Find more details of the editions that are already available on the Surprise Me book page.

Country

Publisher

Publication Date
UK and Commonwealth

Transworld

08/02/2018
US

Penguin Random House USA

13/02/2018
Canada

Penguin Random House Canada

13/02/2018
Germany

Random House Germany

16/07/2018
Russia

Eksmo

date to be confirmed
France

Editions Belfond

01/05/2019 (tbc)
Romania

Polirom

30/05/2018 (tbc)
Italy

Mondadori

13/02/2018
Brazil

Editora Record

30/04/2018
Sweden

Printz Publishing

26/06/2018
Serbia

Laguna

03/03/2018
Holland

House of Books

27/02/2018
Finland

Werner Soderstrom Oy

03/04/2018
Greece

Psichogios Editions

14/06/2018
Indonesia

Penerbit PT Gramedia

01/08/2018 (tbc)
Turkey

Dogan Egmont

date to be confirmed

Read an early extract from Surprise Me!

After being together for ten years, Sylvie and Dan have a comfortable home, fulfilling jobs, beautiful twin girls, and communicate so seamlessly, they finish each other’s sentences. They have a happy marriage and believe they know everything there is to know about each other. Until it’s casually mentioned to them that they could be together for another sixty-eight years… and panic sets in. Read the opening chapters of Surprise Me!
You can pre-order your copy using the links below too:

PROLOGUE

I have this secret little vocabulary for my husband. Words I’ve invented, just to describe him. I’ve never even told him about them: they just pop into my head, now and then. Like…
Scrubcious: the adorable way he scrunches up his face when he’s confused, his eyebrows akimbo, his gaze imploring, as if to say: Explain! Dan doesn’t like to be confused. He likes everything straight. Clear. Out in the open.

Tentery: that taut, defensive way he behaves whenever the subject of my father comes up in conversation. (He thinks I don’t notice.)

Shoffed. When life has turned round and punched him in the face so hard, his breath is literally taken away for a moment.

Actually, that’s more of an all-purpose word. It can apply to anyone. It can apply to me. Right now, it does apply to me. Because guess what? I’m shoffed. My lungs have frozen. My cheeks are tingling. I feel like an actor in a daytime soap, and here’s why: 1. I’m prowling around Dan’s office, when 2. he’s out at work, oblivious to what I’m doing, and 3. I’ve opened a secret locked drawer in his desk, and 4. I can’t believe what I’ve found; what I’m holding; what I’m seeing.

My shoulders are rising and falling as I stare at it. My brain is shouting panicky messages at me, like, What? And: Does that mean…? And: Please. No. This is wrong. This has to be wrong.
And, almost worst of all: Was Tilda right, all along? Did I bring this on myself?

I can feel rising tears, mixed with rising incredulity. And rising dread. I’m not sure yet which is winning. Actually, yes I am. Incredulity is winning and it’s joining forces with anger. ‘Really?’ I feel like shouting. ‘Really, Dan?’

But I don’t. I just take some photos with my phone, because… just because. Might come in useful. Then I put it back, shut the drawer, lock it carefully, check it again (I’m slightly OCD over locked doors, turned-off washing machines, that kind of thing, I mean, not a big deal, I’m not crazy, just a bit… you know) and back away, as though from the crime scene.
I thought I knew everything about my husband and he knew everything about me. I’ve seen him cry at Up. I’ve heard him shout ‘I will vanquish you!’ in his sleep. He’s seen me wash out my knickers on holiday (because hotel laundry costs are ridiculous) and he’s even hung them up for me on the towel rail.

We’ve always been that couple. Blended. Intertwined. We read each other’s thoughts. We finished each other’s sentences. I thought we couldn’t surprise each other any more.

Well, that shows how much I knew.

 

ONE

FIVE WEEKS EARLIER

It begins on our tenth anniversary. Who would have thought?

Actually, there are two things going on here: 1. Who would have thought it would all kick off on such an auspicious day? And 2. Who would have thought we’d make ten years in the first place?

By ten years, I don’t mean ten years since our wedding. I mean ten years since we first met. It was at my mate’s Alison’s birthday party. That was the day our lives changed forever. Dan was manning the barbecue and I asked him for a burger and… bam.

Well, not bam as in instant love. Bam as in I thought, ‘Mmm. Look at those eyes. Look at those arms. He’s nice.’ He was wearing a blue T shirt which brought out his eyes. He had a chef’s apron round his waist, and he was flipping burgers really efficiently. Like he knew what he was doing. Like he was king of the burgers.

The funny thing is, I’d never have thought ‘ability to flip burgers’ would have been on the list of attributes I was looking for in a man. But there you go.

Watching him work that barbecue, cheerfully smiling all the while… I was impressed.

So I went to ask Alison who he was (‘old uni friend, works in property, really nice guy’) and made flirty conversation with him. And when that didn’t yield any results, I got Alison to invite us both to supper. And when that didn’t work, I bumped into him in the City, ‘by accident’ twice, including once in a very low-cut top (almost hooker-like, but I was getting a bit desperate). And then finally, finally he noticed me and asked me out and it was love at, you know, about fifth sight.

In his defence (he says now) he was getting over another relationship, and wasn’t really ‘out there’.

Also: we have slightly edited this story when we tell other people. Like, the low-cut hooker top. No-one needs to know about that.

Anyway. Rewind to the point: our eyes met over the barbecue and that was the beginning. One of those kismet moments that influence your life forever. A moment to cherish. A moment to mark, a decade later, with lunch at The Bar.

We like The Bar. It has great food and we love the vibe. Dan and I like a lot of the same things, actually – films, stand-up comedy, walks – although we have healthy differences too. You’ll never see me getting on a bike for exercise, for example.

And you’ll never see Dan doing Christmas shopping. He has no interest in presents, and his birthday becomes an actual tussle. (Me: ‘You must want something. Think.’ Dan (hunted): ‘Get me… er… I think we’re out of pesto. Get me a jar of that.’ Me: ‘A jar of pesto? For your birthday?’)

A woman in a black dress shows us to our table and presents us with two large grey folders.

‘It’s a new menu,’ she tells us. ‘Your waitress will be with you shortly.’

A new menu! As she leaves, I look up at Dan and I can see the unmistakable spark in his eye.

‘Oh really?’ I say, teasingly. ‘You think?’ ‘Easy.’ He nods.

‘Big-head,’ I retort.

‘Challenge accepted. You have paper?’

‘Of course.’

I always have paper and pens in my bag, because we’re always playing this game. I hand him a roller-ball and a page torn out of my notebook, and take the same for myself.

‘OK,’ I say. ‘Game on.’

The pair of us fall silent, devouring the menu with our eyes. There’s both bream and turbot, which makes things tricky… but even so, I know what Dan’s going to order. He’ll try to double bluff me, but I’ll still catch him out. I know just how his mind weaves and winds.

‘Done.’ Dan scribbles a few words on the page and folds it over.

‘Done!’ I write my answer and fold my own paper over, just as our waitress arrives at the table.

‘Would you like to order drinks?’

‘Absolutely, and food too.’ I smile at her. ‘I’d like a Negroni, then the scallops and the chicken.’

‘A gin and tonic for me,’ says Dan, when she’s finished writing. ‘Then the scallops also, and the bream.’

The waitress moves away and we wait till she’s out of earshot. Then:

‘Got you!’ I push my piece of paper towards Dan. ‘Although I didn’t say G&T. I thought you’d have champagne.’

‘I got everything. Slam dunk.’ Dan hands me his paper, and I see Negroni, scallops, chicken in his neat hand.

‘Damn!’ I exclaim. ‘I thought you’d guess langoustines.’

‘With polenta? Please.’ He grins and refreshes my water.

‘I know you nearly put turbot.’ I can’t help showing off, proving how well I know him. ‘It was between that and the bream, but you wanted the saffron fennel that came with the bream.’

Dan’s grin widens. Got him.

‘By the way,’ I add, shaking my napkin out. ‘I spoke to-‘

‘Oh good! What did she-‘

‘It’s fine.’

‘Great.’ Dan sips his water, and I mentally tick that topic off the list..

A lot of our conversations are like this. Overlapping sentences and half- thoughts and shorthand. I didn’t need to spell out, ‘I spoke to Karen, our nanny, about baby-sitting’. He knew. It’s not that we’re psychic exactly, but we do tend to sense exactly what each other is going to say next.

‘Oh, and we need to talk about my mum’s…’ he says, sipping his drink.

‘I know. I thought we could go straight on from…’

‘Yes. Good idea.’

Again: we don’t need to spell out that we need to talk about his mum’s birthday gathering and how we could go straight on from the girls’ ballet lesson. We both know. I pass him the bread basket knowing that he’ll take the sourdough, not because he likes it particularly, but because he knows I love focaccia. That’s the kind of man Dan is. The kind who lets you have your favourite bread.

Our drinks arrive and we clink glasses. We’re both pretty relaxed this lunchtime, because we’ve got the afternoon off. We’re renewing our health insurance, and so we both need a medical, which is slated for later on today.

‘So, ten years.’ I raise my eyebrows. ‘Ten years.’

‘Unbelievable.’

‘We made it!’

Ten years. It’s such an achievement. It feels like a mountain that we’ve scrambled to the top of. I mean, it’s a whole decade. Three house moves, one wedding, one set of twins, about twenty sets of Ikea shelves… I mean it’s practically a lifetime.

And we’re very lucky to be here, still together. I know that. A few other couples we know who started off around the same time as us weren’t so fortunate. My friend Nadia was married and divorced within three years. Just didn’t take.

I look lovingly at Dan’s face – that face I know so well, with its high cheekbones, sprinkling of freckles and healthy glow from all the cycling he does. His sandy, springy hair. His air of dynamism, even sitting here at lunch.

He’s looking at his phone now, and I glance at mine, too. We don’t have a no-phone rule on dates because who can go a whole meal without looking at your phone?

‘Oh, I got you something,’ he says suddenly. ‘I know it’s not a real anniversary, but whatever…’

He produces a gift-wrapped oblong and I already know it’s that book about tidying your house that I’ve been meaning to read.

‘Wow!’ I exclaim as I unwrap it. ‘Thanks! And I got you a little something, too…’

He’s already smiling knowingly as he feels the heft of the package. Dan collects paperweights, so whenever he has a birthday or a special thing, I get him one. (As well as a jar of pesto, obviously.) It’s safe. No, not safe, that sounds boring and we’re definitely not boring. It’s just… Well. I know he’ll like it and why waste money on taking a chance?

‘Do you love it?’

‘I love it.’ He leans over to kiss me, and whispers, ‘I love you.’

‘Love that Dan,’ I whisper back.

***

By 3.45pm we’re sitting in a doctor’s surgery, feeling pretty marvellous about everything, in the way you only can when you’ve got the afternoon off work, your children are at a playdate after school, and you’re stuffed with amazing food.

We’ve never met Dr Bamford before – the insurance company chose him – and he’s quite a character. He brings us both into the room together, for a start, which seems unconventional. He does our blood pressure, asks us a bunch of questions and looks at the results of the fitness tests we did earlier. Then, as he writes on our forms, he reads aloud in a rather theatrical voice.

‘Mrs Winter, a charming lady of 32, is a non-smoker with healthy eating habits…’

Dan shoots me a comical look at healthy eating habits and I pretend not to notice. Today’s our anniversary – it’s different. And I had to have that double chocolate mousse. I notice my reflection in a glass cupboard door and immediately sit up straighter, pulling in my stomach.

I’m blonde, with long, wavy hair. I mean really long. Waist-length. Rapunzel style. It’s been long ever since I was a child, and I can’t bear to cut it. It’s kind of my defining feature, my long blonde hair. It’s my thing. And my father adored it. So.

Our twin girls are also blonde, and I make the most of it by putting them in adorable Scandi stripy tops and pinafores. At least I did until this year, when they both decided they love football more than anything, and want to live in their lurid blue nylon Chelsea shirts. I’m not blaming Dan. Much.

‘Mr Winter, a powerful man of 32…’ Dr Bamford begins on Dan’s medical form and I stifle a snort. Powerful. Dan will love that.

I mean, he works out, we both do. But you wouldn’t call him massive. He’s just… he’s right. For Dan. Just right.

‘… and there we are. Well done!’ Dr Bamford finishes writing and looks up with a toothy grin. He wears a toupee, which I noticed as soon as we walked in, but have been very careful not to look at. My job involves raising funds for Willoughby House, a very tiny, niche museum in central London. I often deal with wealthy older patrons, and I come across a lot of toupees: some good, some bad.

No, I take it back. They’re all bad.

‘What a delightful, healthy couple.’ Dr Bamford sounds approving, as though he’s giving us a good school report. ‘How long have you been married?’

‘Seven years,’ I tell him. ‘And we dated for three before that. Actually, it’s ten years exactly since we met!’ I clutch Dan’s hand with a sudden swell of love. ‘Ten years today!’

‘Ten years together,’ affirms Dan.

‘Congratulations! And that’s quite a family tree the pair of you have.’ Dr Bamford is looking at our paperwork. ‘All grandparents still alive, or else died at a very good age.’

‘That’s right.’ Dan nods. ‘Mine are all still alive and kicking and Sylvie’s still got one pair going strong, in the south of France.’

‘They’re pickled in Pernod,’ I say, smiling back at Dan.

‘But only three remaining parents?’

‘My father died in a car crash,’ I explain.

‘Ah.’ Dr Bamford’s eyes dim in sympathy. ‘But otherwise he was healthy?

‘Oh, yes. Very. Extremely. He was super-healthy. He was amazing. He was…’

I can’t help it, I’m already reaching for my phone. My father was so handsome. Dr Bamford needs to see; to realise. When I meet people who never knew my father I feel a weird kind of rage almost, that they never saw him, never felt that firm, inspiring handshake, that they don’t understand what has been lost.

He looked like Robert Redford, people used to say. He had that glow. That charisma. He was a golden man, even as he aged, and now he’s been taken from us. And even though it’s been two years, I still wake up some days and just for a few seconds I’ve forgotten, until it hits me in the guts again.

Dr Bamford studies the photo of my father and me. It’s from my childhood – I found the print after he died and scanned it into my phone. My mother must have taken it. Daddy and I are sitting outside on the terrace of my old family home, underneath the magnolia. We’re laughing at some joke I don’t remember and the dappled summer sun is burnishing both our fair heads.

I watch Dr Bamford carefully for his reaction, wanting him to exclaim, ‘What a terrible loss to the world, how did you bear it?’

But of course he doesn’t. The longer you’ve been bereaved, I’ve noticed, the more muted the reaction you’ll get from the average stranger. Dr Bamford just nods. Then he hands it back and says, ‘Very nice. Well, you clearly take after your healthy relatives. Barring accidents, I predict nice long lives for both of you.’

‘Excellent!’ says Dan. ‘That’s what we want to hear!’

‘Oh, we’re all living far longer these days.’ Dr Bamford beams kindly at us. ‘That’s my field of interest, you know, longevity. Life expectancy is going up every year. But the world really hasn’t cottoned onto the fact. The government… industry… pension companies… none of them has properly caught up.’ He laughs gently. ‘How long, for example do you expect to live, the pair of you?’

‘Oh.’ Dan hesitates. ‘Well… I don’t know. 80? 85?’

‘I’d say 90,’ I chime I boldly. My granny died when she was 90, so surely I’ll live as long as her?

‘Oh, you’ll live beyond a hundred,’ says Dr Bamford, sounding assured. ‘A hundred and two, maybe. You…’ He eyes Dan.

‘Maybe shorter. Maybe a hundred.’

‘Life expectancy hasn’t gone up that much,’ says Dan sceptically.

‘Average life expectancy, no,’ agrees Dr Bamford. ‘But you two are way above average in health terms. You look after yourselves, you have good genes… I fully believe that you will both hit one hundred. At least.’

He smiles benevolently as though he’s Father Christmas giving us a present.

‘Wow!’

I try to imagine myself, aged 102. I never thought I’d live that long. I never thought about life expectancy, full stop. I’ve just been going with the flow.

‘That’s something!’ Dan’s face has brightened. ‘A hundred years old!’

‘I’ll be a hundred and two,’ I counter with a laugh. ‘Get me with my super-long life!’

‘How long did you say you’ve been married?’ says Dr Bamford. ‘Seven years?’

‘That’s right.’ I beam at him. ‘Together for ten.’

‘Well, just think what good news this is.’ Dr Bamford twinkles in delight. ‘You should have another sixty-eight more wonderful years of marriage!’

Wh-

What?

My smile kind of freezes. The air seems to have gone blurry. I’m not sure I can breathe properly.

Sixty-eight?

Did he just say-

Sixty-eight more years of marriage? To Dan?

I mean, I love Dan and everything, but…

Sixty-eight more years?

‘I hope you’ve got plenty of crossword puzzles to keep you going!’ The doctor chortles merrily. ‘You might want to save up some of your conversations. Although there’s always the TV!’ Clearly he thinks this is hilarious. ‘There are always box sets!’

I smile weakly back and glance at Dan to see if he’s appreciating the joke.

But he seems in a trance. He’s dropped his empty plastic water glass on the floor without even noticing. His face is ashen.

‘Dan.’ I nudge his foot. ‘Dan!’

‘Right!’ He comes to, and gives me a rictus smile.

‘Isn’t that great news?’ I manage. ‘Sixty-eight more years together! That’s just… I mean… Lucky us!’

‘Absolutely,’ says, Dan, in a strangled, desperate voice. ‘Sixty-eight years. Lucky… us.’

Fairy Mom and Me on tour!


Join in the Fairy Mom and Me US blog tour this month with special reviews, promos and giveaways every day until the 22nd!

 

 

Here is a list of all the stops on my virtual tour:

NaNoWriMo tips for writers

I know that lots of you will be taking part in NaNoWriMo this month so I wanted to share some tips and advice that I’ve picked up over the years. I hope it helps and good luck with the challenge!
Sophie xx
 

  1. Write something that you would like to read yourself

Just think: if you were a reader, what would you want to read? The chances are high that if you would grab that book off the shelf then other people would too. That’s the story that you should write, something that will please you.

  1. Ask yourself ‘what if’

You can teach yourself to tease a tiny thing into something else, have fun with it and see the potential in anything – start to see the world in a ‘what if’ way.

  1. Have a notebook with you

Always carry a notebook. Everywhere. Even if it seems irrelevant, note down whatever springs to mind. You can do so much with a passing thought or a snippet of overheard conversations. Don’t worry about what ‘it’ is going to be, just get into the habit of noting down everything and then when you have your big idea you’ll have material ready to work with.

  1. Plan your books

I find starting off with a beginning, a middle and an end is vital. The planning stage can take months, if not years. When I’m writing I do it in my office but for planning I like going and sitting in coffee shops – I like the buzz and I like being surrounded by people but remaining anonymous.

  1. Write your plot points on file cards

I write my key points on cards and Blu Tac them to the wall. Then I stand back and look at the terrain of the story. This way I can decide if I like it and if not just move it around. I also find that during writing the story, something will change so I can move my cards around if needed.

  1. Don’t worry about the genre

It is really difficult to find your voice as a writer, and even harder if you are trying to fit into a genre. Just write your story and wait for other people to put it into a genre – maybe you’ll invent a whole new one!

  1. Just keep going

This one is especially appropriate for NaNoWriMo. It is the hardest thing to do but it is so important. Everyone reaches a wall, either a plot hole or a scene that doesn’t make sense but you just have to keep on going to get to the end. Even if it isn’t the best draft in the world at least you have a book to rewrite!

  1. Drink cocktails!

There is nothing worse than staring at a screen when you get stuck. If I get stuck, I’ll go out with my husband and we’ll order cocktails and talk it over. By the end, we’ve always ironed out the plot and I’m ready to write again.

The Goodreads Choice Awards 2017

I’m thrilled that My Not So Perfect Life has reached the final of the Goodreads Choice Awards! I am so happy that so many of you enjoyed this book, which I adored writing. Thank you to everyone who voted – and should you choose to vote in the final round, I would really appreciate your vote! Sophie x
VOTE HERE

 
 
 
 

My Not So Perfect Life from around the world!

Since My Not So Perfect Life first came out in hardback in February, it has appeared around the world with a number of different looks. Just look at this stunning collection! Do tell, which is your favourite?

My Not So Perfect Life Paperback Tour

To celebrate the paperback release of My Not So Pefect Life, Sophie will be signing copies in Sheffield, Leeds, Liverpool and Manchester. Check below for more details of each signing. Can’t wait to see you there!
WHSmith Meadowhall – 12pm, Saturday 15th July
45 Meadowhall Centre, High Street, Sheffield, S9 1EN

WHSmith Leeds
 – 3.30pm, Saturday 15th July
3-7 Lands Lane, Leeds, LS1 6AW
WHSmith Liverpool – 12pm, Sunday 16th July
Liverpool One, 1-3 South John Street, Liverpool, L1 8BN
WHSmith Manchester – 3.30pm, Sunday 16th July
42-44 The Trafford Centre, Peel Avenue, Manchester, M17 8BA

Surprise!

I am so thrilled to unveil the title of my new book: Surprise Me. It’s coming out in 2018, so there’s a bit of time to wait, I’m afraid. But to get a sneak peek you can take a look at this video!
So what’s Surprise Me about? Well, Dan and Sylvie are a couple who decide to try and add some surprises into their marriage, to keep things interesting. Instead, they find themselves with life-changing shocks… It’s impossible to sum up a book in a few words – but in no particular order, this one is about: marriage, love, sex, Fitbits, surprises, shocks, racy underwear, Battersea Park, parents, death, life, old friends, new friends, misunderstandings, fear and bravery. It made me laugh and then it made me cry and I hope it does the same for you. I can’t wait for you to read it!

Sophie talks to the Glamour podcast

Sophie met with Jo and Leanne from the Glamour team to discuss My Not So Perfect Life, the dangers of putting only your best life on social media and whether it is ok to be a little bit messy from time to time. Listen to the full podcast here.