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Settling into the embrace of a comfy chair at a De Vere mansion house hotel with a good book is one of life’s purest pleasures. Our mansion house hotels are fitting places to get lost in a book, with an abundance of welcoming lounges, atmospheric bars and comfy snugs.

Located across the UK from Surrey to The Cotswolds, our hotels are set within country estates and parkland, where you can discover scenic lakes, sculptures, and breath-taking countryside views. Each hotel is on the doorstep of some of the country’s most beautiful landscapes offering stunning views for you to enjoy as you sit back and relax. 

We’re excited to be working with Penguin again to celebrate the new book from number one bestselling author Katie Fforde, One Enchanted Evening.

Katie Fforde lives in the beautiful Cotswold countryside with her family, and is a true country girl at heart. Each of her books explores a different profession or background and her research has helped her bring these to life. She’s been a porter in an auction house, tried her hand at pottery, refurbished furniture, delved behind the scenes of a dating website, and she’s even been on a Ray Mears survival course. She loves being a writer; to her there isn’t a more satisfying and pleasing thing to do. She particularly enjoys writing love stories. She believes falling in love is the best thing in the world, and she wants all her characters to experience it, and her readers to share their stories.

To find out more about Katie Fforde step into her world at www.katiefforde.com, visit her on Facebook and follow her on Twitter @KatieFforde.

About the book

Step into the world of Katie Fforde where love, romance and the happiest of happy endings are just around the corner. The new novel by the number one bestselling author and queen of feel-good romance.

Ever since she can remember, Meg has wanted to be a professional cook.

But it’s 1964, and in restaurant kitchens all over England it is still a man’s world. Then she gets a call from her mother who is running a small hotel in Dorset. There’s an important banqueting event coming up. She needs help and she needs it now! When Meg arrives, the hotel seems stuck in the past. But she loves a challenge, and sets to work. Then Justin, the son of the hotel owner, appears, determined to take over the running of the kitchen. Infuriated, Meg is determined to keep cooking - and soon sparks between them begin to fly.

Will their differences be a recipe for disaster? After all, the course of true love never did run smooth…

Katie Fforde

We sit down and chat to the wonderful Katie Fforde who shares with us what it’s like to be an author, where she finds her inspiration and a fact that very few people know!

My advice is don’t give up. If you’re really determined you will make it. You learn from every book you write.

1. Tell us a little bit about your new book One Enchanted Evening?

One Enchanted Evening is the third in my series set in the 60’s about three girls who meet at a cookery school. This one is about Meg, the one who really wanted to learn to cook. It is set in a fading but potentially wonderful country house hotel. Characters from the previous two books appear and add to the fun. It was very enjoyable to re-unite my fictional family.

2. How do you choose your characters’ names, have you met them?

I struggle a bit with names. It’s very important to get them right and I have used up a lot of names by now. I probably haven’t met them in real life!

3. Have you always wanted to be an author?

I first thought I wanted to be an author in my twenties when I had two small children who didn’t sleep and a husband who was at sea a lot of the time. Add in two mad cats and an Irish Wolfhound you will understand why I was very tired. I became addicted to Mills and Boon novels as an escape and when I became less tired, I thought, I could write one of these! All in all, I wrote eight novels, either entirely or partially, before I finally accepted defeat and thought it just wasn’t going to happen. It was only then, thanks to the Romantic Novelists’ Association, that I was introduced to a literary agent, who convinced me that I could write something a bit bigger … and writing contemporary romantic fiction proved to be my true calling! My debut novel Living Dangerously was snapped up by a publisher before I’d even finished writing it and was published in 1995 – at the age of 42, 10 years after I first started trying, I was finally a published author. The story was inspired by much of my own life: my town, my job, my wardrobe, and even my elderly cat. Since then I’ve written a further 29 novels as well as a collection of short stories and a Quick Read for The Reading Agency.

4. Where do you find your inspiration when writing?

Inspiration for books is everywhere. In the past I have had ideas for books from television programmes, the small ads in magazines and overheard scraps of conversation. It is amazing how many ideas there are if you keep your antennae on high alert!

5. What are your three favourite books and why?

This is a hard one! My first favourite is King Arthur and his Knights. My mother read it to me when I was very small. I think it made me a romantic novelist. The second is Friday’s Child by Georgette Heyer, the first of hers I read. I carried on until I’d read them all, several times. My third is The Diary of a Mad Housewife by Sue Kauffman which I read when I was 16 and a student in Rome. It was far too old for me really but I re read it recently and I can see why I liked it. The writing is so frank.

6. You can invite three people to dinner, past or present, who would you invite and what would you cook?

I cannot imagine anything more stressful than inviting my heroes to dinner and then having to cook for them but here goes. Georgette Heyer. I don’t suppose she’d come because she’d be too grand and wouldn’t want to have dinner with another writer. Shakespeare because he is the best writer ever, and I don’t suppose he’d be fussy about the food. Maya Angelou, another writer who is right up there. As for the food, I might start with ‘pine cones’ which is savoury chou pastry with cheese and ham which you deep fry. Tasty and quite easy, although a bit ‘last minute.’ Then a really good stew, like beef cooked in beer (which I would do the day before) with a cheese scone topping. For pudding I might do a simple chocolate mousse with cream. I think chocolate needs cream!

7. What is the best piece of advice you have ever been given?

This advice was given to me and other new mothers by a paediatrician, but it applies to everything. ‘Don’t ask advice unless you’re absolutely sure you don’t know the answer.’

8. Do you have any advice for aspiring authors?

My advice is don’t give up. If you’re really determined you will make it. You learn from every book you write.

9. If you hadn’t become a successful writer what would you be doing now?

I’d probably be retired! But I expect I’d have become a counsellor, someone who listens to people’s problems. I am so nosy!

10. Tell us something about yourself that we likely don’t know! The more obscure the better!

I spent three months in Rome when I was 16 studying modern dance and singing. I was spotted by someone looking for dancers and he wanted me in his show. I declined. My mother wanted me home!

11. Which profession do you look at and think: “I’d love to be able to do that?”

Something artistic. I’d love to be able to paint, or be a potter.


Quick fire questions…

1. Where is your favourite place to write? I love my study but also love to write in different places. I like a view.

2. Does writing energize or exhaust you? Bit of both. A good writing day is always cheering but I can feel very tired afterwards.

3. What motivates you? The characters and the story I have on the go. But I do enjoy working with no immediate prospect of retiring.

4. What are 3 words to describe yourself? Disorganised, messy, kind

5. What are you grateful for? My wonderful family and the huge luck I’ve had in my writing career, just for starters.

6. What is one thing everyone should do? Follow at least one of your dreams.

7. What are you reading right now? The School Teacher of St Michael, by Sarah Steel. Loving it!

8. What 3 things you can’t leave the house without? My phone, tissues, my huge handbag.

9. Tea, coffee or wine? These days it’s tea. It used to be wine.

10. Reading, TV, Music – in order. In that order really. I love TV but if I’m away from it I forget it was ever invented.

Katie Fforde blog

Readers love One Enchanted Evening…

***** ‘One Enchanted Evening is a literary hug that filled me with a comforting warmth and made me crave for more.’

***** ‘I loved this book so much that I devoured it in a day and a half. The characters were very well rounded and you instantly become invested in the storyline, the characters, and the beautiful old hotel.’

*****’A lovely relaxing read, perfect for a winters day, or for that matter as a holiday read!’

***** ‘One Enchanted evening is everything you need in a novel when the weather outside demands you snuggle under a blanket with a good book.’

***** ‘This is a nice, escapist tale.’


Praise for Katie Fforde…

‘Think Sound of Music, Cold Comfort Farm and the joie de vivre of early Jilly Cooper, but all uniquely and irresistibly Katie Fforde. If you need cheering up and some unashamed escapism, this is perfect.’ PHILLIPA ASHLEY

‘The queen of uplifting, feel good romance’ AJ PEARCE

‘Effortlessly lovable, warm and fun’ CLOSER

‘Katie Fforde is on sparkling form’ INDEPENDENT

‘Top-drawer romantic escapism’ DAILY MAIL

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