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						Talk: Sophie Kinsella on finding comedy in shopping 
			
   
            
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						[February 20, 2015] By 
						Ngozi Kemjika 
			
						NEW YORK (Reuters) - 
						Best-selling English author Sophie Kinsella is back in 
						shopping mode with her latest novel, “Shopaholic to the 
						Stars,” which takes her intrepid heroine to Hollywood. 
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				 It has been four years since the release of the last book in 
				the best-selling series about the life of a former financial 
				journalist and compulsive shopper named Becky Bloomwood. 
				 
				In "Shopaholic to the Stars," she relocates to Los Angeles with 
				her husband and begins a career as a stylist but her Hollywood 
				adventure may not be what she was expecting. 
				 
				Madeleine Wickham, who writes under the pen name of Sophie 
				Kinsella, spoke with Reuters about how her childhood shaped her 
				imagination and the popularity of her books. 
				 
				Q: You grew up in a family of writers. How much impact 
				has this had on you? 
				 
				A: In my family story telling was truly valued. My 
				parents told us an invented story every night. My mother would 
				create these amazing characters and fantasy series and this all 
				had an effect on me growing up. 
				
				  
				Q: How did you conceive the shopaholic series? 
				 
				A: My "Visa bill moment" was my starting point. I was 
				shopping and I had a vision of a girl, really myself, opening a 
				Visa bill and experiencing all the emotions you feel when you 
				look at your Visa bill, from denial to anger and disbelief. I 
				saw the comedy in shopping, which no author had yet explored. 
				 
				Q: The series is more than a decade old, how do you keep 
				readers interested? 
			
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			A: I write stories which interest me and that is how I’ve 
			always written. Becky Bloomwood is always fresh because when I write 
			about her I feel exhilarated. She is funny, silly and gets into so 
			much mischief. For those reasons I am always dying to know what 
			happens with her next. 
			Q: What advice would you give to people who want to get into 
			comic writing? 
			 
			A: Don’t be happy with the first draft. You have to write and 
			re-write. With comedy you need to be tough on yourself but equally, 
			not afraid to put yourself out there. The best comedy comes from 
			truthful and embarrassing places. 
			 
			Q: The film, "Confessions of a Shopaholic," was based on your 
			books. Will there be another movie? 
			 
			A: I haven’t heard of any firm plans to make a sequel 
			although with the movie world you never know. 
			 
			(Editing by Patricia Reaney; Editing by Cynthia Osterman) 
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