About Me

I love words, language, sentences, metaphors, stories long and short, poetry, reading and writing.

Reading is a journey, a meeting place, something to enjoy in solitude and to share with friends.

Here are a few words about what I am reading, how I heard about it and any other random, connected thoughts on reading and writing.

Citizen of Planet Earth, I was born in a hideaway town in the Wairarapa, raised on a hill country sheep farm, educated in Auckland & Christchurch, awakened in London, and now live  and work in France.

Enjoy reading and thank you for your thoughtful comments, they are very motivating and I appreciate every one of them.

Claire

182 thoughts on “About Me

  1. Hi Claire,
    I enjoy your blog and nominated you for the Liebster Award. Not sure how much that means, if anything, but you can read about it over at my blog – return2writing.com

    Happy Reading!

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks Michael Ann, it was a delightful piece and I so related as did many others, great that you shared it with that lovely artwork that so captures that refreshing freedom. If only other chores did the same!

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Hi Claire,
    Thanks for leaving a comment on my website and ‘following’ me on Twitter. Yes, I have years and years of research invested in my books… with my next one, medieval this time, due to be released spring 2012. The research never seems to end, but for me, it’s a type of ‘spike history.’ (I do a general overlay, then learn everything I can about a ‘drilled down’ period and location.) I also have a daughter with a ‘Masters in History’ that doesn’t let me stray too far!

    And yes, my novel,The Seahawk’s Sanctuary, is available in print at Amazon, B&N, and other sites – including some international ones, but the eBook price is significantly less. As for the Kindle, I was gifted one for my birthday this year and I love it!!! With the holidays just around the corner, Amazon has currently reduced the price to around $75. Good luck with your writing…

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Oh how very nice to find you, Claire! You have a new follower…I’ll be the one over here with a notebook and pencil jotting down all of the great book recommendations and savoring your style of presentation.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Hi Claire. I just wanted to tell you how much I appreciated and enjoyed your comments on my blog. How you picked up on the idea, after reading about my emotional sensitivity, that living the military life must have been hard on me. Yes, that is true. I think that is why I am so rooted where I live now and don’t want to ever leave! And why I get attached quickly to people. Anyhow…it did have it’s consequences. I just like how you gave them some thought. Thank you for not only reading the words, but seeing the big picture!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Hi Claire! So nice of you to stop by my blog Everyday Underwear and leave a comment. France is beautiful and I visited Paris many years ago, when in high school. It was funny because I was a teen and had a unique haircut for my central Illinois area, but in France I was accepted more readily on the trip because someone told me I looked local! Stop back by for today’s post – I actually referred to you in it 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  6. Hi Claire

    I am envious you live in France. I live in Cape Town, at the bottom of Africa, which is beautiful but feels very far away from Europe. I, too, love reading, writing, words, sentences, the beauty of language.

    Keep writing and reviewing

    Nella

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Hi Claire – I’ve come to you via your comment on my blog today. Noticing you were living in Aix, I simply had to write. My heart lies in the south of France and we have visited many times in the last 15 years. My husband and I spent four months (May to September) in Antibes in 2011. I’ll look for you on SheWrites!

    Liked by 1 person

  8. Dear Claire,

    Thank you for leaving a comment on my blog, Ironwoodwind re Homeland Security. I have several friends from New Zealand and used one of their phrases (and hijacked their attitude) for my brief piece about future goings on in our dysfunctional, oh, so strangely named ‘security’ bureaucracy.

    I have followed your blog, not out of any sense of obligation, but because I am drawn to it’s look, feel and content. I hope to spend many pleasant hours wandering there. Thank you.

    Spent three of the best weeks in my life in the Chamonix area. I am green with envy that you live there.

    Aloha,

    Doug

    Liked by 1 person

    • Hi Nella,
      I haven’t, but I do intend to, he has been on my list to read for many years. I would be interested to know your thoughts. One person I am sure has read it is dovegreyreader, she is a prolific reader and always up with the latest books out. I love her site, something to aspire to.

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Thanks; I’ll be interested to see your comments when you read it (and do, it is wonderful). I have looked at dovegreyreader before, but hadn’t signed up for her blog, so thanks for reminding me.

    Liked by 1 person

  10. Reading and traveling are the two things I love most in this world! In our house in France that we are currently remodeling, I have a whole room dedicated to being my own personal library. It is something I have begged for since I was a kid. The library will be a bit small, but one day I hope for it to be immense! There is nothing like the feel of pages, the smell of the binding and total sense of being when I have a book in my hand. It’s magic and I’m always thirsty for more 🙂
    Ashley

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Claire, thank you for your blog! As a gesture of appreciation, I nominated it along with others, for a ‘Versatile Blogger Award’. The award (to my understanding) has no official status and comes with a set of rules that I think you can feel free not to follow. I just thought to say you have a most excellent blog – I thoroughly enjoy following it!

    Versatile Blogger Award

    Liked by 1 person

    • I guess I ought to write something about that, as you may see from the blog, I write about what I read and I choose freely what I read. I do read a few advance copies, but they are books that I choose from the list of titles available, so they are in keeping with the type of books I like to read and tend to be of the literary genre and in particular I like to read authors and/or stories across cultures.

      Liked by 1 person

  12. Bonjour Claire, and merci for your comment on my site. I was born in Wellington, studied and worked in Auckland, lived in London and as you know, now live in the South of France – I will enjoy reading about your many sources of inspiration…

    Liked by 1 person

  13. Came across your blog via Patricia Sands’ blog and was instantly attracted by your multicultural background and that you live just a little further south of me in France (OK, quite a bit further south, I’m in Rhone Alpes). Will be visiting again soon and reading your reviews, as I like reading crosscultural stories too. Have you read ‘The Expats’ by Chris Pavone?

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thank you, wonderful to find like-minded souls and refreshing to discover them not so far away. I haven’t read ‘The Expats’ do you recommend it? I’m currently reading ‘Third Culture Kids’, necessary reading for parents I’m told.

      Like

  14. Great blog! Thanks to you, I just added many new books to my “must read” list. FYI at one of my academic conferences, I heard someone say that the average American buys one book a year…and reads only half of it. Can you imagine such a life? *Shudder*

    Liked by 1 person

  15. Hi Claire, I found your blog and your ‘likeness’ and I actually think it’s a really stunning photo! Who needs a photo shoot when they have a picture as glamorous as yours? Love it! Thanks for visiting Romance That Rocks Your World, and I’m really excited to have found Word for Word. Am following and look forward to ‘meeting’ you loads in your posts. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  16. As I drool over the idea of you living in Aix en Provence, I look up this bio, and find that you started out from where I am living right now…actually an hour outside Auckand by the sea. Love your writing

    Liked by 1 person

  17. Hi, Claire.

    You said, “I love words, language, sentences, metaphors, stories long and short, poetry, reading and writing.”

    I wish I had arrived at that passion earlier in life. You know! Where I came from, the cultural forces and family pressure for a male to go into sciences are monumental. I always felt drawn to expressions of thoughts and feelings.

    I found that with a more extensive vocabulary, I became equipped to intelligently process the words and actions of those before and now.

    When I moved to the USA, I solely focused on improving my English. I had flipped the page and started a new journey with words. Ten years later, I reconciled my past with the present and found that the words I learned in English rationalized the past from an adult point of view.

    Finally, I admire your goal. A book a week!!!

    Warm regards,
    Osama

    Liked by 1 person

  18. Hi Claire! Thank you so much for visiting The Big Green Bowl and saying “hello.” It was really nice to hear from you. I have not been on She Writes in forever… I hope you are having a good summer too!

    Liked by 1 person

  19. Hi Claire, thank you for visiting and following my blog. I love your post on ‘Rain’ — as a sodden Londoner I rarely have kind thoughts about that particular weather phenomenon but you made me think about it differently 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks Judy, I have been thinking of you because I have a little note written to myself in my agenda reminding me that you are back in France and today I met a group of ladies for coffee at Les Papilles! 🙂 I’m going to London tomorrow for a few days, but will be here for all the festive season, so lets meet for sure. Thanks for the link, I will check it out.

      Liked by 1 person

  20. Last night I came home to find that a fellow blogger chose me to be one of his recipients of the 2012 Blog of the Year Award. One of the several blogger-nominate-a-blogger type awards that seem to multiply like rabbits in the blogosphere. Part of the drill is, I get to ‘award’ fellow bloggers, whose blogs I enjoy. Well, tag. You’re it. The rest of the drill is letting said fellow bloggers know. Now you know. It’ll be in virtual print tomorrow. Hope you’re ok with it.

    Liked by 1 person

  21. Dear Claire,
    Greetings from Australia. I was born in Europe, have lived most of my life in Australia, yet lived more many years in different countries of Europe. France is the place I love best. All the best and I sincerely wish you a blessed year.
    God bless

    Liked by 1 person

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  23. First, I love your blog. Second, I’m a member of ITW (International Thriller Writers) and have a new young adult paranormal coming out April 9, 2013 titled “The Other Side: Melinda’s Story.” I was hoping to perhaps do some sort of feature/highlight/review to coincide with the book’s release.

    Could you let me know if this is possible? And if so, what you need from me to proceed. To aid in your consideration, I am including below a snippet about the book.

    Thank you. I look forward to hearing from you.

    The Other Side: Melinda’s Story
    By
    Starr Gardinier Reina

    If I tell you the story, will you believe me?

    Melinda James’ father is dead. But he tries to warn her from the ‘Other Side’ that the killers from the past want something only Melinda can give them. And they are beginning to get far too close for comfort. Can dead people protect the living? And if they can, will it be enough? And does this ‘Other Side’ really exist or is this all in Melinda’s mind?

    In her world, as portals open and close, Melinda must find a way to understand that the voices speaking are sending dire warnings. She is out of time. They are here, desperate to take what they feel is theirs and they will stop at nothing to get it.

    Liked by 1 person

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  25. I noticed you visited my blog, so I thought I would return the favor and am glad I did. I enjoy the range of books you read and appreciate how many. I am a reader myself, though not as big as you are. You mentioned that you were up for suggestions, so I would recommend “The Fault In Our Stars” by John Green. At first glance it looks like just another teenage book, but as you read it, it makes you think about life on a whole other level. This is my personal favorite book so far, take it or leave it.
    Much obliged, Becca

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks for the recommendation, though I haven’t read it, Fault in Our Stars is one I bought for a nephew for Christmas, I’ve read many great reviews of it and don’t doubt that it’s a great read. Thank you for the affirmation and returning the visit 🙂

      Liked by 1 person

  26. Hello, Claire. I just found your blog today, as you wrote a lovely review of Niki Tulk’s Shadows and Wings. I will certainly start following Word by Word, and am wondering if you have any interest in reviewing my book, called Living by Ear? If so, I’d be happy to send you a copy, either a paperback or Kindle version. My blog is http://www.livingbyear.com and there’s a bunch of info there about the book–as well as other musings about life, etc. Thanks so much! I look forward to hearing from you. –Mary

    Liked by 1 person

  27. A new award, I am Part of the WordPress Family Award, has recently appeared on WordPress and I have nominated you for it. You can read about it on my blog today.

    Liked by 1 person

  28. I am new to your blog, having followed the award nomination from Three Hundred and Sixty Five. I wonder if you would consider reading my book? My blog gives details of the book, (in addition to some interesting, funny posts.)

    Liked by 1 person

  29. Hi, there!! nice to know you. I myself wish to read more Turkish literature other than those of Orhan Pamuk’s, but I haven’t got the chance yet. hope I can get some reviews here 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

  30. Hi Claire!
    I just nominated you for the Liebster Award on my blog, I hope you will want to take part!It can be the opportunity to tell us more about yourself! 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks Rosemary, I shall add it to my list. Did you see that I’d just finished Helene Gestern’s The People in the Photo? I am curious to know the background and whether the author herself has personal experience with uncovering family mysteries, when the story is compelling, it is often the case.

      Like

  31. It’s protectionism to make people buy the paper version before the electronic version takes over. I don’t know if you have noticed but French e-books are at least double if not triple the price of English e-books.
    May I make a suggestion for your website? Perhaps you could have a tab for book suggestions to keep them altogether.

    Liked by 1 person

    • I hadn’t noticed, perhaps because most of the French books I have downloaded are classics and there are always multiple versions available in e-book form. It is certainly a protected industry!

      Are you on Goodreads? That’s where I tend to keep my TBR and find recommendations from others, I added your suggestion there immediately.

      Like

  32. Yes, I’m on Goodreads but don’t use it very much. I shall do so more often! My husband only reads in French and we’ve been amazed at the difference in the price of e-books in French and English, except, as you say, for the classics.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Great, I think I found you. It’s really useful for recommending and seeing who else of your friends has read something.

      Yes, I think the industry is doing with e-books what it does with hardbacks, makes people pay through the nose if they want to read something that’s only recently published.

      Do you belong to NetGalley?

      Like

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  37. Hi Claire,
    Would you like to review an advance copy of my novel ‘Ignoring Gravity’? It is the story of Rose Haldane’s own ‘Who Do You Think You Are?’ television programme. Rose is confident about her identity. She pulls the same face as her grandfather when she has to do something she doesn’t want to do, she knows her DNA is the same as his. Except it isn’t: because Rose is adopted and doesn’t know it. ‘Ignoring Gravity’ connects two pairs of sisters separated by a generation of secrets. Finding her mother’s lost diaries, Rose begins to understand why she has always seemed the outsider in her family, why she feels so different from her sister Lily. Then just when she thinks there can’t be any more secrets…
    If you’d like more info, please e-mail me at sdan2364 [at] btinternet [dot] com
    Thanks, Sandra
    http://www.sandradanby.com

    Liked by 1 person

  38. Claire, an Australian friend recommended your blog. I like a lot of what you say about books and your reading. I don’t know much about you as a person, but personally blog a lot about singledom, childlessness, the older woman, gender ambiguities and the gender divide. As one aspect of this, I write about how these themes appear in art and books – fiction included. I’d love your view on those pieces at http://boywoman.wordpress.com. (I’ve also recently had a novel published, in which those themes recur: ‘On the Far Side, There’s a Boy’. It would be lovely to correspond.

    Liked by 1 person

  39. I did not have in mind the 100th anniversary of WWI when I read and recently reviewed “Sojourn”. If you did not read it, it is worth doing so. Coincidentally, I have just started Jean Echenoz’s “1914”. We seem to have compatible interests in what we read, so I have just followed you.

    Liked by 1 person

  40. Hi Claire,

    I fully respect your right to read what you like, thus I will simply put my novel, Dear Infidel, on your radar…

    Given that you review contemporary fiction and enjoy cross-cultural works, my novel should appeal. It’s a traditionally published work of ‘accessible literary’ fiction, and a story about ‘…love, hate, longing and sexual dysfunction, all sifted through the war on terror..’ Moreover, it speaks to no pigeon-holed audience – it’s zeitgeisty and for everyone. It could really strike a chord.

    Beyond long form I write shorts too (I have a piece published in Ginosko Literary Journal, Issue 16 – ginoskoliteraryjournal.com), and review fiction and non-fiction for a number of e-zines:

    ‘Quite brilliant’ – Cakes, Custard and Category Theory by Eugenia Cheng

    http://queenmobs.com/2015/06/review-were-flying-by-peter-stamm/

    I hope you feel inclined to accept a review copy. (Pls let me know your preferred format).

    Sincerely,

    Tamim Sadikali.

    Liked by 1 person

  41. Bonjour Claire, As you popped up on my blog I have been catching up on your site, you have been busy, bravo! I am wondering how I can contact you directly – I could post my email address for you? Bonne journée, Vivienne, Céret

    Liked by 1 person

    • Your message notification just popped up in my email inbox and underneath it had an email address, which bounced back, so here is my email claire dot mcalpine at gmail dot com.

      I’ve actually been a little quiet on the blog since the end of summer, but found a renewed enthusiasm recently, it’s such a salve the process of writing.

      I hope all is well in your neck of the woods, escapism from tragic events seriously required at present, your images are so beautiful ad such a great reminder of the natural beauty that continues to exist and nurture us.

      I look forward to hearing from you,

      Claire

      Liked by 1 person

  42. Thank you for the follow on Twitter, as it took me to your blog! So nice to discover a fellow New Zealander and your thought-provoking and engaging book reviews !

    Liked by 1 person

    • Likewise! I was so moved by the photos when I landed on your page, I spent an evening with you, reading all your newsletters and following your reviews within them and admiring your wonderful benchseat looking out over the beach at Great Barrier Island I think it is, I spent a few days there in my early twenties, before I left NZ and I have also spent time sailing around the Whitsundays so I know that wonderful pleasure too 🙂

      Thanks for visiting here and following, I think I’ll subscribe to your newsletter to continue to follow your journey too. I was too late to get a netgalley copy of your book, but I’d love to read it, if your publisher is willing to provide me with a copy.

      Liked by 1 person

  43. Bonjour Claire, I just read your introduction. May I tell you, you are a lovely, erudite and inspirational woman. Your blog, your life’s beginnings, travels are truly inspiring. I hope France, my home country brings you happiness. I was born in Paris, Monaco was my parents home, Villefranche s/mer was my own first home. I also traveled and find myself in Virginia, US, the US is my three sons home country, so I am here to stay, I miss the Mediterranean and all it’s beautiful towns.
    My blog is miserably slow, I will persevere 🙂 Reading is a life long passion.
    I am also on face book under my maiden name:
    Sylvie Madeleine Meignan
    I wish you a nice week 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    • Sylvie, thank you so much for your kind and thoughtful words, and I am pleased to be appreciative of the gifts of your home country, that I am sure you miss so much. My son is only 13 but he was born in NZ and I sometimes think he may wish to live there one day, but for now at least we are all in one place and love it.

      There is no set pace for a blog, it is just when the mood takes us and I can imagine with three sons and family, you have much to occupy your time. My blog is like a friend, I love spending time writing and its short form suits me for the moment, when I must often be present elsewhere and not away in the imagination making up stories, which one day I’d like to return to.

      Liked by 2 people

  44. Many thanks for liking a post on The Expositrix! Always good to connect with other fellow lovers of the word. (And I saw that you recently read Enchi’s Masks. I found it intriguing enough to read The Tale of Genji, the latter of which I found useful, but not much beyond that. Still: it’s fantastic when one book leads you down a trail to another.)

    Liked by 1 person

    • Thanks for your comment, yes just finished Masks and had to divert off and look up a plot summary of The Tale of Genji, which I’d heard about more for it being the first novel ever written by a woman, and thought it interesting how part of it referenced the character of Meiko. I see the author Fumiko Enchi translated one of the versions of The Tale of Genji, so not surprising perhaps that it’s so deeply embedded in her subconscious and comes out in her own storytelling. I do love how one book leads to the other like that, have you read Sjon’s The Whispering Muse? It too is a novella, with a strong connection to a Greek epic poem The Argonautica.

      Liked by 1 person

  45. Hi Claire,
    Love your blog and your reviews. I also admire your eclectic taste in books. So I am hesitant but still want to ask you whether you will be interested in reviewing my debut, multicultural novel, Love, Life, and Logic. It’s published by Harvard Square Editions, and it’s due out on 29 Nov 2016.
    I don’t want to go on and on about my book here. I will be glad if you kindly take a call after you have checked this out: http://harvardsquareeditions.org/portfolio-items/love-life-and-logic/
    Best Regards,
    Uday Mukerji

    Liked by 1 person

  46. Greetings from Jersey, Channel Islands! Thank you so much for the follow. Love your blog and will be a regular visitor from now on. Am just about to read Swing Time. I bought it some time ago and can’t wait to read it … saving it for my holiday at the end of the month.

    Liked by 2 people

  47. I enjoyed reading “what they said”. Thank you for your reviews.

    Writing is applying the q-tip to the bird. The reader the one with the real nerves. Where both come about finding ‘what is’; when the show lifting beak for neck to be here, now.

    “Many persons, after they become learned cease to be good; all other knowledge is hurtful to him who has not the science of honesty and good nature.” Montaigne

    Liked by 2 people

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  49. Hello and thank you for the very thoughtful comments on my blog, I really appreciate them! I have thoroughly enjoyed browsing Word by Word. I think it will be one of my major sources for recommendations in future – especially for books about different cultures, which I am aspiring to read more of!

    Liked by 1 person

  50. If you’re interested / have the time, I would love some reviews for my books, Akin to the Truth and After the Truth. (about being adopted). After the Truth is the sequel, a short read and in desperate need of reviews. You do not have to read the 1st book to “get” the second book.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Hi Paige, I just discovered your blog as I’m in the adoptee book club and I was heading over to look at your memoir books and got distracted by your wonderful blog posts. Since I joined the club and as it’s a little like research I’m looking to read other’s memoirs too. I’d love to read your story, maybe we should all be reading it. 🙂

      Like

      • : ) I read some others to learn how to write my own. Both my books are styled very differently. The sequel is less verbose but also covers a shorter amount of time. I’d love for a book club to pick up my book. I never know how appropriate it is to self promote.

        Like

  51. Hello, Jane from Penguin Books here.

    Would you be interested in receiving the paperback edition of Claire Fuller’s wonderful novel BITTER ORANGE, out with a beautiful new paperback look on 2 May? We’re asking reviewers to post in publication week. If you’re interested, please do drop me a line on jgentle@penguinrandomhouse.co.uk with your name, address and links to your various platforms. Claire will be re-tweeting/sharing reviews. Very best, Jane

    Like

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  54. Hello,
    My name is Mariam, A friend of mine,Najib, is obsessed with African literature and Jennifer name has come up lots of times. I wish to gift him”the first woman” on his birthday. Your review about it got me excited. I definitely think he will enjoy it.
    Thank you.

    Liked by 1 person

  55. Hi Claire, I stumbled across your blog and I just wanted to leave a comment to say I’ve really enjoyed reading through your blog and seeing all the books you recommend! Thanks for sharing 🙂 x

    Like

  56. Hi Claire
    I stumbled onto your site via a post in linked in about kerri ni dochartaigh’s latest book. I’m an organic farmer and writer (and several other hats) based in SW France. I wondered if you would be interested in reviewing my latest book Cultivating Change. Nature writing, memoir, climate change and more. I saw that you live in France too making me even more keen to connect. Thanks for your consideration. Looking forward to connecting. Cordialement, Caro Feely

    Like

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