There is no such thing as an emerging butterfly. There are caterpillars and there are butterflies. I don't know what an 'emerging writer' is, but whenever I apply for things or look at entries, I'm not it. Not enough publications, too many publications, haven't earned enough, or too much, no big novel, too many different … Continue reading Butterfly Effects and Emerging Writers
Stuff I Like
Filled with references to stuff I like in music, film, tv, reading, writing, online etc.
Interrogating The Avengers, Doctor Who &…Brideshead Revisited
'Ere be spoilers These are the compare and contrast notes of the Star Ship...damn, wrong universe. No this is the Blog of Bec, who wonders: is Joss Whedon a Doctor Who fan? Are Doctor Who writers fans of the Marvel universe and vice versa? And why is gamma radiation? Imagine if Doctor Who had the … Continue reading Interrogating The Avengers, Doctor Who &…Brideshead Revisited
Ten Commandments for the …
Ten Commandments for the Novelist 1. Thou shalt not write with one ear to the cash register, for the clink of coin may deafen thee to the rhythm of thine own prose. 2. Thou shalt not have contempt for thy readers. They may yet write rings around thee. 3. Neither shalt thou befuddle them with obfuscations thou understandeth not thyself. 4. Thou shalt not covet the success of thy neighbours: neither style, nor plots nor characterisations, nor royalties. 5. Honour thy language and write earnestly. Master the tools of thy trade and be as good a joiner in words as a master carpenter is in wood. 6. Be not hasty after the plaudits of the multitude, for they will pursue thee in thy measure and worth, and though they come not quickest to those that are lacking in greed, yet they stay the longest. 7. Despise not those masters who came before thee, and neither do thou worship them blindly. 8. Thou shalt not pose nor regard thyself as anointed, for the seeds of talent are as the sands on the seashore and ten thousand may spring into bloom and expose thee for a weed. 9. Thou shalt not look away from life about thee, for in it lie thy roots and thy nourishment. 10. Write from the depths of thy soul and men (sic) will know thee from its quality.
Adapted from Louis Zara and quoted from - Birmingham, Frederic S. The Writers Craft Arthur Barker Ltd, London: 1959.
An Open Letter to an Author…Hope it’s not you.
Why? She asked. Dear Author, The best part of book shops is the casual browse. The other day I picked up a random book, which will remain unnamed. It might have been yours. Congratulations on being published. The blurb successfully attracted my attention, while the cover had a modicum of cool and attractiveness, which invited … Continue reading An Open Letter to an Author…Hope it’s not you.
Writing is a doing word
For a very long time I thought writing might be a thing I could do. Don't even know why I thought it, before blogs and probably before internets and the dawn of civilisation. But there it was, I read stuff and in primary school I wrote stories (ok, rewrote stories my mum wrote) and in … Continue reading Writing is a doing word
Getting the review right
I read a review of Kathy Lette's new novel about a woman with a son with Aspergers. The book itself sounded ok, but the review retold the story in a very unflattering light while also giving away what seemed to be the most hilarious moments. And now I don't need to read the book. A … Continue reading Getting the review right
In which therein you will encounter a writing update, talk of historical novels and study
One year of MA down. Summer semester over and a new one just begun, to quote from the classics. It was more gruelling than expected. Perhaps because summer kinda felt like it should have been holiday time and I was slaving over discussion threads and readings and deadlines (as well as some work and life). But it … Continue reading In which therein you will encounter a writing update, talk of historical novels and study
I have made this blog lon…
I have made this blog longer, because I have not had the time to make it shorter.
To paraphrase Blaise Pascal...but he's right in terms of short story writing. Honing a story so it is lean and sharp and short takes time, lots of editing time and lots of thinking and linking time. For a short story to gleam and cut like a perfect small diamond it must have space to grow in the imagination and draft and then to shrink in the edit.
It’s my belief that hist…
It's my belief that history is a wheel. "Inconsistency is my very essence" -says the wheel- "Rise up on my spokes if you like, but don't complain when you are cast back down into the depths. Good times pass away, but then so do the bad. Mutability is our tragedy, but it is also our hope. The worst of times, like the best, are always passing away"
Boethius (Anicius Manlius Severinus) from The Consolation of Philosophy
On not writing (much) about War Horse
Joey Come Home I was going to write an in-depth review of War Horse. But I can't. All I have are these: it's a glowing ode to that familiar genre the Devon Western, complete with a righteous property owner and endearing accents. It's a heart-warming rural family saga, with gigantic close ups of characters' faces, … Continue reading On not writing (much) about War Horse