So join us this Festive Season in offering a smile and happy greeting to not just our friends but passers-by, especially those walking alone. A little Christmas kindness costs nothing yet gladdens each participant’s heart.
Wednesday, 23 December 2020
Wishing Our Readers Festive Cheer
So join us this Festive Season in offering a smile and happy greeting to not just our friends but passers-by, especially those walking alone. A little Christmas kindness costs nothing yet gladdens each participant’s heart.
Friday, 18 December 2020
A Chance to Meet Fellow Authors
Bridge House Publishing |
Bridge House Publishing, a small independent publisher specialising in anthologies, has always organised get-togethers for its authors.
Face to face meetings now being impossible, it recently invited contributors to the Transformations anthology to a Zoom meeting. Instead of getting to know each other over sandwiches in a pub, we raised a glass at home to the book's success. The camera allowed us to put faces to names. After exchanging snippets of news, we tested our wits in a literary quiz and listened to some authors reading their work. A welcome initiative in these strange times.
Transformations is available in paperback from Amazon.
Madeleine McDonald
Friday, 11 December 2020
NaNoWriMo - how was it for you?
The National November Writing Month descended again. Last time I turned around, it was March, so how come it was suddenly November?
My writing activity has not been stellar in this year of lockdowns. I think many writers have suffered this malaise. Initially, we all probably thought we would be able to sit down and devote the time we were normally out and about to writing. But it hasn't turned out like that.
And that's where NaNoWriMo has been a godsend for me. I thought at one point about giving up writing completely, but, again, like many other writers, it isn't only habit that sends us to our desk and keyboard, it is an internal need to tell the stories that teem in our heads. Every day away from my desk is a day when I feel I am not doing my job, leaving me with a melancholy regret. But I had lost my mojo.
I decided to do NaNoWriMo to regain that discipline of sitting down every day and banging out words. Because that is what NaNo is all about. Banging out the words, taking yourself on a white-hot ride and not worrying if you have just used the correct word. You've used the word that will probably be changed when you edit, but you've said what you wanted to say quickly. NaNo is about speed.
I managed just over 60,000 words by 30th November, writing two-thirds of the latest Georgia Pattison mystery Who Wants To Live Forever. And if you want to know a bit more about Georgia's latest adventure, you can read about it on my blog - authorapriltaylor.blogspot.com
You can read more about April Taylor here:
Monday, 28 September 2020
Virtual HumberSFF #7 – The Social On Your Sofa
Hornsea Writers member Shellie Horst not only writes and reviews Speculative Fiction but organises HumberSFF. Under its umbrella she facilitates its twice yearly “Socials” – free mini Litfests – inviting authors from around the country to visit the Humber region to talk about and read from their work.
This being Covid year, face-to-face events are no longer an option. Not to be daunted, Shellie organised HumberSFF’s first Virtual Social via Google Meet. Participants and attendees alike sat in their own comfy chairs, grabbed a beverage of choice, and for nigh on three hours enjoyed a series of readings, Q&A sessions, and hearing the inspiration and working practices of the four authors. If you weren’t there you missed a treat, and much inspiration.
Keith W Dickinson brings his love of Steampunk and Crime together with a wry sense of humour in Dexter & Sinister: Detecting Agents. A liking for mechanical cats is not obligatory.
Shona Kinsella writes both Fantasy and Science Fantasy. Her current work, a novella The Flame and the Flood will soon be followed by a reissue of her Fantasy trilogy The Vessel of Kaladene.
Joe Hakim is a performance poet, a broadcaster, a writer in residence. His Science Fiction/Horror novel The Community is set firmly in Hull.
Tim Major is a prolific writer of works that cover the full gamut of Speculative Fiction. Hope Island leans towards Supernatural Mystery. Beware of singing caves.
As ever with HumberSFF’s Socials, there was a free book raffle. Four lucky attendees are currently awaiting delivery of their chosen titles, ably facilitated by the independent bookshops who stepped up to help out:
JE Books of Hull : The Portal Bookshop, York : The Rabbit Hole, Brigg
Thanks to everyone who contributed. HumberSFF’s Socials are not recorded. You have to be there, virtual or not, so Follow the Website to receive notification of the next.
Friday, 18 September 2020
When "How to" becomes "How NOT to"
All writers know that the more they
write, the more they will improve. But sometimes this quest for perfection can
prove to be a trap. Let me tell you my experience.
I have around 14 titles in the
virtual world, but, like most writers, I am always looking to improve how and
what I write. But sometimes, the quest to achieve this can stop you in
your tracks. By which, I mean “how to write your book”
books/articles/blogs/courses and the like.
After I had written 10 or so books
and novellas, I wanted to try and refine my writing process. And so I began
what has been a two-year journey to find that perfect method, and believe
me there are thousands of self-help books etc. out there. This begs the
question as to why there are so many. I am afraid to say that my cynical
answer is that the authors of these books will probably earn far more from their
self-help books than they do from their own creative writing because these
books feed a need in authors to improve, but they also feed our inbuilt insecurity in our
own abilities. I know that I could quite easily teach a 10-week writing course
for students at my local college. And I also know that if I did so, I would
earn so much more from that than I do from my crime books.
The sad truth is, that after two
years of searching for perfection, my writing has dwindled to a struggling nothing. Some days every
word is like wading through treacle. It seems the more articles/books I read and try to incorporate into my writing process, the deeper the
quicksand becomes. I have now called a halt to reading all these “improvement” books.
And do you know why? Because I know how I write my books. I know what my
process is, what works best for me.
After much deliberation, I've decided I must reacquaint myself with the way I used to write in order to be able to keep on writing – find again that wonderful joy in my craft I seem to have lost. I do not decry any self-help books and articles. And I think, even for the seasoned writer I now realise I am, they can prove useful for the odd nugget of information. But for me, they made me question my own ability to write and that is what has stopped me writing.
I must find my old inventiveness, the one that
isn’t lashed to a someone else's structure, but a structure that works for me. The
problem writers have is that people can tell you but you can write until
they are blue in the face. This is the same for many professions but especially
the creative ones and, having been a serious singer for most of my life, I can tell
you we creatives are all insecure creatures who don’t believe we can do
anything well.
I have decided I am neither a plotter nor a pantser but a hybrid. Instinctively, I start with what-if? Then I find my characters and get to know who they are. I put them into my what-if situation. I already know what the end will be. In fact, after writing four or five chapters, my default was to write the last chapter. I will go back to that.
What happens between those five
chapters and the end is, as I have often said, like a roadmap. I want to get
from London to Edinburgh, but my characters decide which route I will take. I
also use index cards to denote the towns – i.e. significant events - I must drive
through in order to reach Edinburgh.
My objective is to publish three titles by
Christmas 2020. Long Shadows is written and in process of being edited. Loyalty in Conflict has been messed about with so much in the past two years that I am now at the stage where I have ripped it apart and am
rewriting huge tranches of it. The third will be the farewell George Pattison Mystery,
where she marries her beloved Sir Edward Broome, but of course, there’s just
the little matter of a murder along the way.
Next year I intend to start a new
crime series set around the northern UK town of Guisborough. It will be crime with
a paranormal element. It will also be very interesting to see how fast I write
it going back to my method. Watch this space.
You
can read more about April Taylor here:
Friday, 4 September 2020
Making the Most of a Windswept Book Launch
It was the August Bank Holiday weekend in the coastal town of Hornsea. After the long Covid-19 lockdown the town was open for business, visitors were streaming in, and Saturday was the date of the Artists’ Fair in the garden behind The Townhouse gift shop.
It was also the launch for Book 2 in my Yorkshire historical series, The Story of Reighton: New Arrivals. What could possibly go wrong?
As can be seen from the photograph below there is no accounting for the British weather. Sun-tops were out; big jumpers and wet weather gear was in.
I was sharing an open-sided tent with a photographer and a young couple selling slate and glass art. Before we’d officially started, the photographer and I each had to grasp a tent pole to stop them flying out of their sockets in the strong gusts of wind. This was a recipe for disaster. Guy-ropes were being shaken free of their pins. And then it started raining, the spray covering our wares.
Desperate measures were needed. So, trying not to stand on any flowers in the nearby border, I climbed through the shrubs, guy-ropes in hand, to find something a little more secure to fasten them to. A nearby tree seemed sturdy enough, but throughout the afternoon I still kept a hand on a shuddering tent pole, just in case, and only dare let go to sign copies of my novel.
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Me in red making the most of it |
Did the weather keep people away? To my astonishment, no. And much to my surprise I sold 20 copies. The day was well worth the effort and it was great to meet and chat with readers.
Joy Stonehouse
Book 1: Witch-bottles and Windlestraws (A Story of Reighton, Yorkshire 1703 to 1709)
Book 2: New Arrivals in Reighton (A Story of Reighton, Yorkshire 1709 to 1714)
Friday, 28 August 2020
Short stories for radio
Covid-19 has seen radio listening increase. Whether they are decorating the dining room, sewing on buttons, or simply washing up, people have rediscovered the joy of radio. Unlike the hypnotic flickering of a television screen, radio makes for interesting company, whatever the task.
Covid-19 has also opened up opportunities for radio writers. BBC Radio Leeds has an on-going call for short stories suitable for a mid-morning audience. Two of my stories, Tickety Boo and The Marriage of True Minds, were recently broadcast on Radio Leeds, and were posted on the catch-up site BBC Sounds.
Both pieces had been published before, but needed tweaking for radio, since hearing words is not the same as reading them.
Make yourself a cup of tea, click on the links below, and enjoy.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/collection:p089p9hw/p08ng5tf
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/collection:p089p9hw/p08kzk45
Madeleine McDonald
Friday, 21 August 2020
Do you have the Audacity to accept the Audio Challenge?
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Screen shot of 'Scent of the Boggel-Mann' reading |
It was supposed to be a video, not audio, of me reading an excerpt from one of my stories, but when I ran back the test piece… Well, it could have frightened the horses. Or at least created the sort of social media sensation no one in their right mind wants hounding them to the grave.
I’d been asked to provide a five minute videoed reading as one of the fillers for this year’s virtual FantastiCon. Time was running out. What could I do except regret that I wouldn’t be contributing?
My email had hardly been Sent when the response came in: they’d accept audio. Oh dear… or words to that effect. If I tried to back out a second time I’d never be asked again. There are times when a woman’s gotta do what a woman’s gotta do, and this was one of them.
A while ago I’d read up about Audacity, a free. open source, cross-platform audio software package, but I’d looked no further than its rave reviews. I refound its page, took a breath, and hit Download.
What occurred during that single afternoon you can read about HERE. What it opened up was a whole new world of opportunity. When all you need is a little audacity, never be afraid of taking up a challenge.
Just not video.
Linda Acaster
Saturday, 8 August 2020
Hornsea Writers showcased at virtual event
At this time of year, several Hornsea Writers would usually be heading for Fantastic Books Publishing's FantastiCon convention. The pandemic has put paid to a physical gathering, but there will be a virtual event on 15th and 16th August where six new books will be launched.
Although no Hornsea Writer members have books launched at this event, their work will be showcased, so please call in and expect to hear from Linda Acaster, Stuart Aken, Penny Grubb, Shellie Horst and maybe more.
The virtual FantastiCon schedule is HERE.
The event will be streamed on Twtich TV HERE.
For mini reviews on each of FantastiCon 2020's launch books, click HERE.