Vintage Synopsis
This is a great pageturner that will make you laugh, think and cry.
Two girls swap lives – Holly lives now, and Marilyn lives in 1962.
Holly is sexy and has attitude. Marilyn has inky fingers and has never
been kissed. Holly makes some chaos in 1962 – and Marilyn finds a life
she’d never dreamed of.
Click here for an Author Q&A with Maxine Linnell.
About This Edition
ISBN: |
9781905512874 |
Publication date: |
1st May 2010 |
Author: |
Maxine Linnell |
Publisher: |
Five Leaves Publications |
Format: |
Paperback |
Pagination: |
148 pages |
Primary Genre |
Young Adult Fiction
|
Recommendations: |
|
About Maxine Linnell
Maxine Linnell grew up in Leicester, but couldn’t wait to get out,
so she headed for Birmingham University. She’s done loads of jobs, from
stacking shelves in Sainsbury’s to helping people to stop smoking, but
she’s been a psychotherapist for a long time now, as well as having two
wonderful kids.
A few years ago she decided to do what she’d always wanted to do -
to write. She ended up back in Leicester after time in Bristol and
North Devon, did an MA at Nottingham Trent University and joined a big
community of local writers. Maxine has published a one-act play, and
has had short stories broadcast on local radio and poems published in
small poetry magazines. She’s also been working on retelling three
Thomas Hardy novels for Real Reads, which will be published this year.
Vintage is her first published novel.
An Interview with Maxine Linnell:
Vintage is set in 1962 and 2010, why did you choose those years?
I
was a teenager in 1962. It was just before the Beatles and the Rolling
Stones changed everything, when people mostly did what they were told,
and girls were meant to look forward to being housewives and mothers.
Holly doesn’t think much of all that when she’s in 1962. I think I was
really lucky to grow up at that time, when so much was changing, though
perhaps a lot of people think like that about the time when they’re
growing up. There were also tough things to deal with too.
And
there’s some fantastic things about 2010, and things that aren’t so
great. I love the amazing stuff we have now, the internet, mobiles,
mp3s, satnavs and takeaways. People are much more free to be who they
are – but there are downsides. Marilyn has to experience the violence,
and it’s very scary.
I thought it would be fun to play with
such very different times, to dump Holly and Marilyn into places they’d
never been and find out how they managed it all. And it was really good
fun to write. I hope it’s fun to read too, and to imagine. There are
lots of older readers who are also enjoying it.
Would you prefer to be a teenager now rather than to have been a teenager in the 1960s?
I
don’t know what it’s like to be seventeen now – but I don’t think I
favour one more than the other. They’re just very different, with good
stuff and bad, like most times I suppose. If I definitely thought
things were better in one or the other, the book wouldn’t be balanced:
I’d be imposing my ideas on the characters and on people who read it. I
don’t like that in books I read, so I wouldn’t want to do that in my
own writing. I’d like people to make up their own minds. I know I’m
happy being who I am now!
Your two main characters - the ones
that swap places - are girls. Would it have been different for boys?
If, say, Holly's friend Kyle was also transported in time?
I
can’t imagine Kyle in 1962! He’s so much himself, gay, sensitive – it
was really hard for gay people back then, they couldn’t come out
safely. It’s not easy now, but it’s very different. Girls and boys were
often kept separate – I went to an all-girls’ school, and hardly knew
any boys except for my brother until I was about sixteen. I’m not sure
I could have written the book about boys swapping – I just don’t know
what it would be like. Maybe someone else could write that one!
Holly
and Marilyn - the two characters who swap places in time, they never
meet but towards the end they start to communicate - is there one thing
you'd like them to say to each other?
They do start to
communicate, but through texts and in their minds, and only in
emergencies. They get to know each other well though, through living
each other’s lives! We never get to do that, live inside someone else’s
body, someone else’s time, with their family and their friends – except
through books. That’s partly why I love fiction so much, it gives me a
chance to live someone else’s life for a while, at least in my mind.
And that lets me experience much more than any one person can in their
own life.
I don’t know what they’d say to each other. Holly is
really worried that Marilyn is going to mess things up for her.
Marilyn’s just loving every minute – until things get scary.
Could they meet in the future? Is this the last we'll hear of them or is there more from Holly and Marilyn?
I’d
love to write about them again – I feel like I know them both, and love
them both too! I do have something in mind for them, but there are
other ideas and characters I want to write about.
More About Maxine Linnell