Tuesday 5 March 2013

                                   The Crone Club

“So what have you achieved in your life, then?” Susan asked. Her sharp profile seemed poised almost to stab at Mary across the dinner table. “Come on, dear. Tell us all about your wonderful achievements.”
Cass looked on in guilty silence, despising herself for not speaking out. She wanted to defend Mary, but lacked the nerve. Susan’s sneering voice reminded her of all the bullying she had suffered at school and she felt like a self conscious, awkward teenager once again; the ‘fatty’ of the class. So she stayed silent, just like the rest of the table, and wished again that her old friend George would turn up. George would have given her the courage to stand up to Susan.
 
Welcome to the Crone Club blog on the Goodreads  Boomer Lit Friday  http://boomerlitfriday.blogspot.com/
 
Further information can be found in the posts below or on The Crone Club website:                     http://www.thecroneclub.co.uk
 
 
  
 
When Cass attends a reunion of her old class-mates she has no idea that her life is about to be changed forever. She only accepted the invitation in the faint hope of seeing her best friend George again and finally discovering why she vanished so completely on the last day of school.  Unfortunately George does not turn up and as Cass waits in vain, she soon wishes that she'd stayed away too, especially when her other friends start boasting about the interesting things they've done over the years. With increasing shame Cass realises that her adult life has been a dull one: forty years of wasted talented and unhappy marriage to an abusive husband, without a single achievement, or even a mildly exciting experience to talk about.  Feeling uneasy in the company of her old friends, she prays that no-one will ask her what happened to the old Cass, that promising musician who left school so full of energy and ambition in the '60s.
  But Cass finds out why George suddenly disappeared all those years ago and it makes her angry enough to walk out on her husband and boring old life forever. She embarks on a challenging new life with the friends she had known in her schooldays, a time when life was still exciting and her dreams were fresh.
  Re-united, Cass and her friends form themselves into the Crone Club, in which each of them pledges to recover and realise the dreams and aspirations of their youth.  Nothing is going to stop these women having fun and not a single one of them has any intention of 'acting her age.'
 
 
 
 




Saturday 2 March 2013



          It’s official! The Crone Club has been recognised as part of the Boomer Lit genre.  We are really excited to belong to this new and rapidly growing genre.  Indeed, one of our reviewers Lynn Schneider hailed the Crone Club as an exemplar of the genre: "This novel is a good reminder that it's never too late to become what we were meant to be. It's a good example of baby boomer literature; that just because we reach our later years doesn't mean we are done just yet. We have a lot of living to do, and this book allows us to remember that's possible."

          Boomer Lit is a new and growing genre. There is a social revolution on the horizon and the demographic involved is too big to for anyone to ignore. It involves a rapidly growing new group in our society, which is likely to throw out the rulebook and challenge al the old ideologies – we’ve done it before. And like before, our ideology is being supported by our very own books and films
 


          We are the ‘baby boomers.’ In other words we were born between (and including) 1946 and 1964 and we now make up about a 29% of the U.S. population and 15% of the UK population. A great many of us have now reached our sixties and are starting to redefine that period of life, which used to be termed ‘old age.’ Already there are signs of a radical challenge to society’s expectations of age-appropriate behaviour which echoes that of when we were in their teens.

          Consequently a whole new culture is starting to grow up around the ageing boomer population, emphasising the changing aspirations of a generation that is ageing, but not prepared to be counted as out of the game. This first began noticeable in the cinema. Years ago it would never have occurred to Hollywood to release films such as The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel, Hope Springs and Mama Mia, which have been produced for the ‘more mature’ audience and give employment to brilliant, but ageing actresses.


          It is particularly in this new genre of Boomer Lit where the values of my generation are being extolled and reinforced, however. Literature has always been central to our ideology. We were always readers and perhaps more than any other generation, we still are. While our formative years were influenced by such big events of the sixties as the Cuban Missile Crisis, the rise of the Beatles, the Vietnam War, the deaths of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King, books such as Richard Bach’s Jonathan Livingstone Seagull, Robert A. Heinlein’s Stanger in a Strange Land, Robert M. Prisig’s Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance arguably made a bigger impact on our consciousness.  They inspired us to want to make more meaningful lives for ourselves than it appeared we were offered.  This thinking led us to revolt against the rigid, structures of society of the time and the differential attitudes of our militarised fathers.
But Boomer Lit is not about the past.  It is certainly not intended as a nostalgia trip into the wonders of our youth – dreams of yesterday.  Life is not going to stop for us at 60, anymore than it stopped in the 60s.  Our new boomer lit books such as The Crone Club, A Hook in the Sky by Claude Nougat or the Mutinous Baby Boomer and her Parable of the Tomato Plant by Marsha Roberts support that idea.

We were the generation that was going to change the world, but we got side tracked.  Life swallowed up our dreams, but now we’ve got the time to finish the job we started, the way has opened up for us once again and perhaps for the last time.  Possibilities beckon.  Many of us are just as minded to refuse to obey the ‘rules’ when it comes to facing encroaching retirement, marginalisation and old age as we were in our teen years.  We certainly intend to have a lot more fun before we leave the stage.  

      Just like before there is a need for literature to support our changing values and beliefs, to help us to search once again for ‘meaning’ and go forward into a positive ‘can do’  future.  No wonder there is a growing demand for Boomer Lit books like the Crone Club.

 


Thursday 7 June 2012


The Crone Club comes out of Amazon KDP select today and that means that it won't be exclusive to amazon any longer. So we can now start selling it through Smashwords (which gets it into Kobo, Barnes and Noble, Diesel and lots of other e-book stockists.  I can even sell it from this blogsite and through our own websites:

http://www.svpeddle.co.uk

http://www.thecroneclub.co.uk

The Crone Club website

Home
This is the latest Crone Club website - for one issue we have gone totally books - introducing the Crone Club Bookclub.

Sunday 18 March 2012