About Author

Elaine Spires

Elaine Spires
  • Genre:

    Contemporary Romance New Adult Romance Women's Fiction Humor
  • Country: United Kingdom
  • Books: 4
  • Profession: Author, actor, director
  • Born: 14 March
  • Member Since: Jun 2019
  • Profile Views: 16,623
  • Followers: 57
  • VISIT AUTHOR: Website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Amazon,
BIOGRAPHY

Elaine Spires is a diverse novelist as well as an award-winning playwright and actress.

Extensive travelling and a background in education and tourism perfected Elaine's keen eye for the quirky characteristics of people, captivating the humorous observations she now affectionately shares with the readers of her novels.

She wrote her first book What's Eating Me in 2010. It was originally a play, a one-woman show performed as a monologue with a child actor - Elena-Beth Carter playing Eileen as a child in the background and Elaine performed it on the London and Edinburgh fringes. She loved the character of loved Eileen so much that she decided to expand the story into a book.

Her second novel was Singles' Holiday, set on her beloved Antigua... the Caribbean at its most luscious, its most beautiful... silver sand, cobalt sky, warm, turquoise sea... and a bunch of complete strangers who only have one thing in common: they're single! It went on to be a stage play and the first in a six-book series - Singles Series - set in holiday destinations world-wide and following the life of tour manager, Eve.

And her third novel Sweet Lady, again set in Antigua, will amaze you with a massive twist which goes to show that nothing is as it seems!

Elaine has also written a two-book saga: The Banjo Book One and The Banjo Book Two - about the lives of the families living in a banjo in Dagenham from 1950s up until the present day. The term ‘banjo’ is peculiar to Dagenham and is a pedestrianised cul-de-sac.



When Elaine is not writing her ideas into her next book or play, she enjoys going to the theatre, visiting the cinema, eating out with her friends and she also loves to read! Elaine is a very proud Essex Girl.

Elaine Spires's Books

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Book
A Village in the Country (The Dagenham Story)
$4.96 kindleeBook, Paperback,
A Village in the Country (The Dagenham Story)by Elaine SpiresPublish: Aug 18, 2021
You Never See Rainbows At Christmas
$2.99 kindleeBook,
You Never See Rainbows At Christmasby Elaine SpiresPublish: Dec 01, 2020
Singles, Set and Match (Singles’ Series Book 5)
$3.8 kindleeBook,
Singles, Set and Match (Singles’ Series Book 5)by Elaine SpiresPublish: Jul 01, 2019Series: Singles' SeriesContemporary Romance New Adult Romance Women's Fiction Humor
Singles At Sea (Singles' Series Book 4)
$3.66 kindleeBook,
Singles At Sea (Singles' Series Book 4)by Elaine SpiresPublish: Dec 29, 2016Contemporary Romance New Adult Romance Women's Fiction Humor

Elaine Spires's Series in Order

It's exciting to find a book series to follow! Discover the whole new world of book series created by Elaine Spires.
** Also, there might be other book series by Elaine Spires not listed on AllAuthor.

  • Singles' Series

    1 Singles, Set and Match (Singles’ Series Book 5) - Published on Jul, 2019

Elaine Spires Interview On 17, Aug 2019

"Elaine Spires is a diverse novelist as well as an award-winning playwright and actress. She has been to all the places she uses as a setting in her books and loved every one of them. The characters, however, are from her imagination. She co-wrote Only the Lonely with Veronique Christie who has been a friend for more than twenty years. She has always been a huge tennis fan. She played quite a lot as a young woman. When Elaine is not writing her ideas into her next book or play, she enjoys going to the theatre, visiting the cinema, eating out with her friends and she also loves to read!"
Since you were born in Dagenham and spent most of your childhood there, it would be incomplete if you aren’t asked the infamous geographical doubt of whether Dagenham falls in London or Essex?

It’s London. Greater London. It’s been a London borough since 1965. It has a Romford postcode - and Romford is also in London. Yes, it did used to be in Essex, but that was then and this is now. England used to be part of the Roman Empire but it isn’t any more.

Did you have any travelling memories from your childhood? Which was the best place that you visited from the point of view of a child?

as a child we only ever travelled within UK. I had fabulous memories of days spent down on the Essex Coast in Shoeburyness and Jaywick with my cousins and we had a couple of fabulous holidays camping in Tenby, South Wales.

Do you ever inculcate the places that you visit or the people that you meet in your books?

I have been to all the places I use as a setting in my books and loved every one of them. The characters, however, are from my imagination.

You have a special fondness of setting your books in the places with the ocean (Antigua), is it because of your life living in pleasant places with artistic views?

It’s the other way around. I lived in wonderful places by the sea and they became the setting for the books. I have always been totally intrigued by the sea - the ebb and flow of the tide and the gorgeous shades of blue and green and its ability to turn into a raging, foaming monster in no time at all. And I can sit and watch it for hours on end. I am a Piscean after all!

As a person who did theatre and monologue for a long time, what has been your favourite play that you watched till now? What has been your most cherished memory of doing theatre?

I recently saw Emilia by Morgan Lloyd Malcolm in the West End. It blew my mind. It’s an amazing piece of theatre and I think I would have to say my favourite play. My most cherished memory of doing theatre.... hmmm..... I loved doing my one-woman show What’s Eating Me (now a book) but also appearing in Singles’ Holiday (another book) was pretty special.

What is your relationship like with Ms Elena-Beth Carter now after working with her for so long? Do you ever plan on returning to the stage and reviving your playwriting skills?

We are still in touch. I don’t see Elena as often as I would like unfortunately. I am tremendously fond of her and am her biggest fan. My play Stanley Grimshaw Has Left The Building was performed at the Bridewell Theatre in London in May. And I am working on another play at the moment. So hopefully, I’ll see something else produced soon.

What was your inspiration behind the creation of “Only the Lonely”? It’s an emotional and evoking script what made your go off beat from your usual writing style?

I co-wrote Only the Lonely with Veronique Christie who has been a friend for more than twenty years. We wrote a play and a few sketches together a long time ago and then drifted apart. Veronique contacted me in 2017 and proposed we write together again and I had this character in my head (Elspeth) while Veronique had envisaged the character of Gurmeet and the script grew from there.

Your online journal of Elaine Spires is a collection of your best memories. Have you ever thought of publishing it as a book, even as a wild thought?

I am the first to say I’ve led a very interesting life. Would it make a book? Probably. Would I write it? Possibly...

Your second novel Singles' Holiday is about a bunch of complete strangers who are single, this theme which is roughly on the lines of America's TV show The Bachelor. What inspired you to create a book like that?

I worked as a tour manager for a singles’ tour operator for thirteen years and realised the books (there are five in the Singles’ Series so far) would be great to write as each one is set in a different location - Singles at Sea in several as it’s set on a cruise ship that moves from place to place - with a diverse bunch of characters each time. I am just waiting for a TV company to buy the rights!

How did you come up with the character of Eileen Holloway in your book What's Eating Me as she seems to be a character that is relatable to a lot of women? How did you develop the storyline in a way that left the readers on a self-discovery note?

I think Eileen is typical of so many women - and some men, of course, - who are struggling to keep all the plates spinning and forge a life for their kids and everyone around them while ignoring their own needs. Eileen is a compulsive over-eater because she uses food to get her through the day as everyone and everything sucks the life out of her.

Where do you usually get your creative inspiration for writing? Do you jot down points before writing the novel or just go with the flow?

I honestly don’t know where the creative inspiration comes from - it just does! I get a basic idea, make a few notes and then just go for it. I don’t plan and plot a lot. I prefer to write and then go back and edit as I finish each chapter. What’s surprising is that so often the book goes off on a tangent or a character behaves in such a way that I hadn’t originally envisaged.

As a person with the epicentre of her career around writing for plays, scripts and books. What has been your experiential tip for the people just starting out in their writing careers?

Just get on and do it. Don’t procrastinate. And while it’s good to accept constructive criticism don’t let other people’s opinions put you off writing what you want to write.

When did you discover what armchair tennis is? How did you develop a liking for it?

I’ve always been a huge tennis fan - I played quite a lot as a young woman. Watching tennis on TV is a cross between relaxation and torture - depending on who’s playing and winning or losing!

Will you be going back to India for your third visit? Can we expect another book set in India after single spice? What is your favourite memory of the county?

I would love to go back to India. It’s on my daughter’s To Visit List so there’s always the possibility I’ll go with her. I have so many wonderful memories; the beauty of the Taj Majal at sunrise brought tears to my eyes; Jaipur was incredible and seeing tigers - my favourite animals - in the wild at Ranthambore was priceless.

You recently joined AllAuthor, how has your experience been like with us till now. Are there any tips or reviews you’d like to give us?

I especially appreciate the banners every week; they’re invaluable. Perhaps a bit more retweeting - to a larger audience if that’s possible. But on the whole, I am glad I joined.

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